Zürcher Nachrichten - Seventeen years later, Brood XIV cicadas emerge in US

EUR -
AED 4.183048
AFN 72.314042
ALL 93.898303
AMD 419.153057
ANG 2.038998
AOA 1044.89568
ARS 1690.672427
AUD 1.651032
AWG 2.049928
AZN 1.936081
BAM 1.954785
BBD 2.294468
BDT 140.354657
BGN 1.925657
BHD 0.429413
BIF 3388.074763
BMD 1.138849
BND 1.476807
BOB 7.900759
BRL 5.945252
BSD 1.139188
BTN 108.572718
BWP 16.26327
BYN 3.318918
BYR 22321.433736
BZD 2.29117
CAD 1.618002
CDF 2579.49217
CHF 0.921021
CLF 0.02679
CLP 1054.369086
CNY 7.737281
CNH 7.738112
COP 3904.759012
CRC 518.521655
CUC 1.138849
CUP 30.179489
CVE 110.325979
CZK 24.236636
DJF 202.861103
DKK 7.474566
DOP 68.100581
DZD 151.843155
EGP 55.917926
ERN 17.08273
ETB 181.020431
FJD 2.556938
FKP 0.859051
GBP 0.858179
GEL 3.006554
GGP 0.859051
GHS 12.942983
GIP 0.859051
GMD 83.701678
GNF 9990.551529
GTQ 8.688336
GYD 238.302078
HKD 8.932844
HNL 30.429885
HRK 7.532575
HTG 148.950043
HUF 354.818526
IDR 20438.916901
ILS 3.400037
IMP 0.859051
INR 108.238169
IQD 1492.461169
IRR 1567055.755971
ISK 143.791239
JEP 0.859051
JMD 179.156974
JOD 0.807496
JPY 184.995771
KES 147.42431
KGS 99.592135
KHR 4566.782743
KMF 491.982899
KPW 1024.964193
KRW 1767.23083
KWD 0.352701
KYD 0.94939
KZT 546.006901
LAK 25624.094601
LBP 101983.897292
LKR 382.694568
LRD 207.612203
LSL 18.700172
LTL 3.362724
LVL 0.688878
LYD 7.300234
MAD 10.688123
MDL 20.147185
MGA 4862.883342
MKD 61.638162
MMK 2391.139854
MNT 4080.476394
MOP 9.204059
MRU 45.724815
MUR 53.751653
MVR 17.606532
MWK 1978.180039
MXN 19.972883
MYR 4.662561
MZN 72.71585
NAD 18.699794
NGN 1570.460673
NIO 41.704567
NOK 11.295781
NPR 173.716748
NZD 2.007261
OMR 0.437903
PAB 1.139188
PEN 3.886892
PGK 4.98589
PHP 70.159341
PKR 316.656978
PLN 4.29043
PYG 6924.283008
QAR 4.151678
RON 5.23005
RSD 117.337286
RUB 88.553635
RWF 1668.413287
SAR 4.272278
SBD 9.184861
SCR 15.319799
SDG 683.868824
SEK 11.081677
SGD 1.475521
SHP 0.850266
SLE 28.24243
SLL 23881.091149
SOS 650.862356
SRD 42.711946
STD 23571.867935
STN 24.883843
SVC 9.967649
SYP 125.879331
SZL 18.688698
THB 37.952699
TJS 10.537743
TMT 3.997359
TND 3.355333
TOP 2.742075
TRY 53.146539
TTD 7.733848
TWD 36.269712
TZS 2989.48117
UAH 51.070061
UGX 4174.758967
USD 1.138849
UYU 45.795417
UZS 13723.125953
VES 708.641199
VND 29952.289182
VUV 136.773869
WST 3.167006
XAF 655.605068
XAG 0.018926
XAU 0.000279
XCD 3.077795
XCG 2.053098
XDR 0.814298
XOF 653.130407
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.733346
ZAR 18.667214
ZMK 10250.993881
ZMW 20.739867
ZWL 366.708804
  • RIO

    -1.1000

    93.83

    -1.17%

  • CMSC

    0.1900

    21.83

    +0.87%

  • NGG

    -2.3650

    80.505

    -2.94%

  • BTI

    -0.9600

    60.8

    -1.58%

  • BCE

    -0.1950

    21.315

    -0.91%

  • GSK

    -1.2550

    51.165

    -2.45%

  • BCC

    -1.6500

    75.98

    -2.17%

  • RYCEF

    0.4000

    19.5

    +2.05%

  • JRI

    0.0080

    12.968

    +0.06%

  • CMSD

    0.1400

    22.04

    +0.64%

  • VOD

    -0.2050

    13.02

    -1.57%

  • RBGPF

    0.6100

    65.61

    +0.93%

  • BP

    -0.6650

    36.285

    -1.83%

  • AZN

    -5.6300

    183.99

    -3.06%

  • RELX

    -0.1600

    31.51

    -0.51%

Seventeen years later, Brood XIV cicadas emerge in US
Seventeen years later, Brood XIV cicadas emerge in US / Photo: Mandel Ngan - AFP/File

Seventeen years later, Brood XIV cicadas emerge in US

The last time these thrumming, red-eyed bugs burrowed out of the ground across America's suburbs and woodlands was the early summer of 2008.

Text size:

Global financial jitters were mounting, iPhones were a luxury item, and George W. Bush was still president.

Now, reports from the citizen-science app Cicada Safari show the first insects of Brood XIV -- which emerges every 17 years -- surfacing in the US South. As ground temperatures warm across the North, millions more are expected to follow.

Cicadas belong to the insect order Hemiptera, which includes stink bugs, bed bugs, and aphids.

But they are often mistaken for locusts, a confusion that dates back to early English settlers who likened the mass emergences to Biblical plagues. Brood XIV itself was first documented in 1634.

There are roughly 3,500 species of cicadas globally, many still unnamed.

But periodical cicadas -- which emerge en masse after 13 or 17 years -- are unique to the eastern United States, with two additional unrelated species found in northeastern India and Fiji, says Chris Simon, a leading cicada expert at the University of Connecticut.

"Everybody's fascinated by them, because you see nothing for 13 or 17 years, and then all of a sudden, your house and car are covered in these insects," Simon told AFP.

"This is a marvelous phenomenon that you can take your kids to see and marvel at, watch them come out of their shells and wonder about how they evolved," she added, urging the public to appreciate, not fear them.

"The world wouldn't survive without insects."

Because their emergence years are staggered, different periodical cicada broods appear in different years. In 2024, a rare "double whammy" occurred when the 13-year Brood XIX overlapped with the 17-year Brood XIII.

That's not the case in 2025, but excitement remains high around these mysterious critters, which continue to intrigue scientists -- especially given that the evolutionary logic behind their prime-numbered life cycles remains unresolved.

Cicadas are often thought of as "creatures of history," conjuring memories of past life chapters -- what you were doing when this brood last emerged.

They spend nearly their entire lives underground, passing through life stages called instars, before tunneling to the surface for a brief few weeks to molt, mate, and die -- while their newly hatched offspring drop from trees and burrow into the soil, beginning the cycle anew.

Males produce their deafening mating calls using tymbals, sound-producing membranes on either side of their abdomens, creating a chorus that's been likened to sirens or power tools.

They don't bite or sting, and they don't eat solid food in their adult form, though they drink water.

Instead, their defense is overwhelming abundance -— swarming in such numbers that they satiate predators like birds, raccoons, foxes, and turtles, playing a crucial role in the ecosystem.

But their survival strategy is increasingly challenged by human-caused changes.

Widespread deforestation and urbanization have destroyed habitat. And now, climate change is triggering more frequent occurrences of "stragglers" -- cicadas that emerge four years too early or too late, often in numbers too small to survive, which could threaten long term population numbers.

Simon added that in areas like the capital Washington, these asynchronous emergences are forming "a patchy mosaic" of overlapping broods.

Then there's the political climate. Under President Donald Trump, the federal government has fired scientists en masse and frozen funding for new research.

Simon submitted a grant proposal last August to the National Science Foundation for a major genetic study into cicadas' internal clocks -- biological mechanisms that somehow track the passage of years, unlike humans' 24-hour circadian cycles.

"Nobody knows what's happening," she said, decrying the current attacks on science.

A.Senn--NZN