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Cicadas Swarm Midwest

Monday, May 21, 2007
Billions of Bugs to Emerge After 17-Year Absence


Midwesterners should expect a "buggy" season this summer with the coming of the 17-year cicadas. Often confused with locusts, these periodical cicadas are large insects that emerge after spending 17 years underground.

"We are expecting a huge cicada season," says National Pest Management Association Technical Director Greg Baumann. "The species that is arriving this year is known as the Brood XIII.' Some areas will experience up to 1.5 million cicadas per acre."

Easily identified by their striking black bodies, red eyes, and red wing veins, cicadas will be crawling out of the ground and shedding their skin in May. This particular brood will emerge in parts of Iowa, Wisconsin, Michigan and Indiana.

A cicada's odd life cycle is its innate defense mechanism. When they emerge, they do so in such enormous numbers there are simply too many of them to be wiped out by their natural predators. Scientists call this "predatory satiation." Their predators become tired of eating them - too full to continue to prey on other cicadas, allowing some of the insects to breed.

"Cicadas pose absolutely no threat to humans or animals. They are truly a nuisance pest and will do nothing more than startle a homeowner with their strange appearance and loud singing," commented Baumann. "These pests are natural oddities - homeowners should be more concerned with true health- and property-threatening pests, such as termites, ticks, mosquitoes, rodents, ants and cockroaches, rather than worrying about cicadas."

For further information on cicadas or health- and property-threatening pests such as termites, carpenter ants, mosquitoes, ticks, cockroaches, stinging insects and rodents, visit pestworld.org.

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The NPMA, a non-profit organization with more than 5, 000 members, was established in 1933 to support the pest management industry's commitment to the protection of public health, food and property.

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