时间:2025-01-18 21:20:27 来源:网络整理编辑:綜合
Even on an Air Force base tarmac, a cicada landed on the president's neck. The spectacular emergence
Even on an Air Force base tarmac, a cicada landed on the president's neck.
The spectacular emergence of a double brood of cicadas in 2024, with some 1.5 million of the harmless insects emerging per acre in some places, will result in cicadas landing on people's shirts, arms, hair, and...beyond— just as the impressive insects did in 2021. But the bugs have no real interest in people: After 13 or 17 years of munching on roots underground, the periodical broods emerge to hastily mate and lay eggs.
So what's going on? When cicadas emerge, they seek out trees, the places where they often congregate, mate, and ultimately lay eggs on the ends of branches. And to a cicada, trees and people have similarities.
"Cicadas land on people because they strongly resemble trees," explained Eric Day, an entomologist and cicada expert at Virginia Tech. "It's rare to see a cicada on the ground."
SEE ALSO:Bed bug outbreaks are real. Here's what experts want you to know."Insects that utilize trees are strongly attracted to upright dark silhouettes and a human standing on an open area is close enough," added Day. "So cicadas and wood-boring beetles will go right towards any dark upright object."
That's why if you're standing on a flat runway, like President Biden, a cicada may be keen to find you. "You might be the tallest structure out there," mused Day.
"You might be the tallest structure out there."
The latest cicada emergence involves two different periodical broods, which are groups that emerge in 13 or 17 year cycles, that haven't emerged together in over two centuries, since 1803 (Brood XIII and Brood XIX). They're appearing in regions of the Midwest and Southeast, as shown in a map below.
Tweet may have been deleted
Tweet may have been deleted
The sheer number of cicadas that emerge over a short time in spring also likely plays a role in the cicada landings, noted George Hamilton, the chair of the Department of Entomology at Rutgers University. With potentially millions of bugs around, a structure-seeking insect is more likely to find you.
Cicadas are indeed cacophonous as males vigorously vibrate their abdomens to attract mates. But they are no threat to people. And the cicadas' short-lived emergence is a great boon to wildlife.
"Birds snatch them up, mammals easily spot them, and insect predators consume their fill," Robert Furey, a behavioral ecologist and entomologist at Harrisburg University of Science and Technology, told Mashable in 2020 when a different brood, Brood IX, emerged. "Every predator with a taste for cicada flesh takes advantage of the easy prey."
"It’s an incredibly amazing biological phenomenon."
Tweet may have been deleted
Though human development and urbanization in some places may slash the number of cicadas in some places (the bugs can't bore through pavement), President Biden can probably attest that the emergences are robust.
"It’s an incredibly amazing biological phenomenon," Day told Mashable.
This story originally published during the emergence of Brood X in 2021 and has been updated.
TopicsAnimals
There's a big piece of fake chicken stuck to this phone case2025-01-18 21:14
Pepsi autopsy: How the brand got its commercial so massively wrong2025-01-18 21:09
An ode to the Twitter bot that tweets every color imaginable2025-01-18 21:08
Trump's internet support squads are infighting after missile strike in Syria2025-01-18 20:35
Two states took big steps this week to get rid of the tampon tax2025-01-18 19:41
Google claims it awards gender2025-01-18 19:15
Bella Hadid seems to think Postmates involves going outdoors with a giant plate of deviled eggs2025-01-18 19:10
How 'The Good Fight' is tackling politics while avoiding 'Trump fatigue'2025-01-18 19:04
Dog elected for third term as mayor of Minnesota town2025-01-18 18:54
This person shut down a Twitter troll so hard even J.K. Rowling approved2025-01-18 18:47
'The Flying Bum' aircraft crashes during second test flight2025-01-18 21:05
Chinese travellers are cutting up their United Mileage cards in anger2025-01-18 20:58
Here are a bunch of photos of Jared Kushner just staring blankly into the middle distance2025-01-18 20:46
Badass 1052025-01-18 20:46
The U.S. will no longer have the final say on internet domain names2025-01-18 20:39
Spotify killed the epic instrumental intro2025-01-18 20:37
People are trolling United Airlines with these brutal new slogans2025-01-18 20:06
Retro hipster style meets functional design in this old2025-01-18 20:01
Fiji wins first2025-01-18 19:34
United Airlines lost $800 million in value (but got some of it back)2025-01-18 19:02