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The long hot days
of summer are filled with many familiar sounds; kids splashing in a pool,
the sound of a bat hitting a ball and the often heard screeching song
of a male cicada singing to attract a mate.
Cicadas are often
called harvestflies or locusts. There are 166 species of cicadas found
in the U.S. and Canada. Some of the best known species include the periodical
cicadas and the dog-day cicadas.
Cicadas
range in size from less than 1.0 inch too longer than 2.25 inch. They
are rather robust insects with large bulging eyes and transparent wings
that are held roof-like over their body. Most species are brownish but
some are marked with orange, green black or white.
Female cicadas lay
their eggs in slits that they cut in the bark of twigs, in the top of
trees. When the eggs hatch the tiny nymphs fall to the ground and burrow
into the soil. Some may burrow several feet deep. The nymphs resemble
wingless adults but have their front legs greatly enlarged and developed
for digging.
The
life cycle of cicadas is quite lengthy. It ranges from four years in some
species to as long as 17 years in periodical cicadas. Once fully developed
the nymphs dig their way to the surface. They emerge from the soil at
night and crawl up a tree trunk, shrub or other structure. Here they molt
into adults. The old nymphal skin or "shell" as it is often called, is
left hanging on tree or other structure, while the adult flies off to
begin the next generation. Adults live only for about four to six weeks.
Adult cicadas feed
by sucking sap from twigs and stems. Nymphs suck sap from roots. Feeding
activity does not cause plant damage. However, the egg-laying activity
of the female can damage and even kill small twigs in the top of trees.
Only male cicadas
sing. The sound is produced by a complex, membranous organ, located at
the base of their abdomen. Muscles attached to the organ vibrate it rapidly,
producing the sound.
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