Oh, to be a cicada. For the last 17 years, a group of cicadas known as Brood XIV has been buried several inches underground, doing very little. This particular batch of insects has missed a global pandemic, Donald Trump winning two presidential elections, Br…

Published ایک ماہ قبل on مئی 8 2025، 7:01 صبح
By Web Desk

Oh, to be a cicada.
For the last 17 years, a group of cicadas known as Brood XIV has been buried several inches underground, doing very little. This particular batch of insects has missed a global pandemic, Donald Trump winning two presidential elections, Brexit, multiple wars, and more.
Now they’re about to emerge.
By the billions.
Across large portions of the eastern US, from Long Island to central Tennessee.
Around May and June, the noisy insects will erupt from the ground and live only for a few weeks — just long enough to find mates and lay eggs — before dying. Once their offspring hatch, the young will bury themselves underground, remaining largely oblivious to the world for another 17 years.
[Image: https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2025/05/Periodical_Cicada_Broods_of_the_United_States__1_.jpeg?quality=90&strip=all]
The map above, which shows Brood XIV in neon green, provides only a rough approximation of where different broods will appear. For a more granular map, check out this one the University of Connecticut provided. This year’s brood is similarly shown in neon green on that map.
Eastern North America is the only place in the world where you find periodical cicadas — groups of cicadas that emerge from the ground every 13 or 17 years, depending on the brood, or group. Slightly different kinds of cicadas, known as annual cicadas, appear every summer and have a global distribution. (How do cicadas count years? Likely using the flow of tree sap, as I explain here.)
* 8 surprising reasons to stop hating cicadas and start worshipping them
* A rare burst of billions of cicadas will rewire our ecosystems for years to come
* Watch Sir David Attenborough seduce a cicada with the snap of his fingers
Brood XIV is the second largest brood of cyclical cicadas and surfaces every 17 years.
While brief, the coming insect explosion will shape ecosystems for years to come. These pulses of bugs provide food for pretty much everything in the forest and have been shown to increase bird populations and shift the hunting patterns of other species. As one study put it, pulses of periodical cicadas can “rewire” entire forest food webs.
If you come across what you think is a Brood XIV periodical cicada, report it! You can download an app called Cicada Safari to submit your photos. It’ll help the researchers who study them.

New intelligence chief of Revolutionary Guards announced
- 35 منٹ قبل

Adobe made a mobile app for its Firefly generative AI tools
- 4 گھنٹے قبل

Ex-player sues Chiefs, cites racial discrimination
- 3 گھنٹے قبل

Trump to decide regarding attack on Iran within two weeks, White House
- 38 منٹ قبل

Pakistan issues travel advisory for Iran, Iraq, Lebanon and Syria
- 43 منٹ قبل

The Atlantic is making a big push into games
- 4 گھنٹے قبل

Pakistan sets global example: Balochistan declares Hinglaj Mata temple a world tourism site
- 17 منٹ قبل

Pakistan-US Relations – Sky is the limit
- 2 منٹ قبل

Actress Ayesha Khan's week-old body found in Karachi flat
- ایک گھنٹہ قبل

This smart light has party speaker aspirations
- 4 گھنٹے قبل

How America’s ideal woman got jacked
- 2 گھنٹے قبل

We’re producing more food than ever before — but not for long
- 2 گھنٹے قبل
You May Like
Trending