Three species of cicada that only emerge once every 17 years are gearing up to spring to the surface in droves.
Brood XIV (14) will emerge this spring in Georgia, Kentucky, Indiana, Massachusetts, North Carolina, New Jersey, New York, ...
Those loud, buzzing red-eyed cicadas will soon be returning to parts of New Jersey. See a map of likely locations.
Cicadas, those loud, large but harmless insects, will soon emerge this spring after 17 years underground in Georgia.
Despite what you may have heard, the newest influx of the red-eyed periodic cicadas will not descend on Maryland in 2025.
Last year, the Great Southern Brood of cicadas emerged after 13 years, crawling up trees, molting and leaving their outer ...
It's almost that time of year again. The weather gets warmer, flowers start to bloom and cicadas emerge from their 17-year ...
Cicadas of Brood XIV will begin to emerge from the underground in 13 states across the country this spring, according to cicada expert Gene Kritsky.
These cicadas have spent the last 17 years underground and will emerge when soil temperatures reach 64-65°F. Here's whether 17-year cicadas are in Arizona They're back! The infamous 17-year ...
The noisy, alien-looking bugs are expected to return to the Peach State once again this spring, but this year’s brood is not ...
The 17-year cicadas emerge for about four to six weeks. For the Cincinnati area, this should be the last large emergence for ...