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It’s going to be a very noisy summer! This year, more cicadas will fill the air with—song?—than any summer since 1803. Cicadas evolved 150 million years ago, and 3,000 species now live on nearly every continent. These are called “annual” cicadas. They live a few years underground, then crawl up a tree and shed their crusty “underground” skin for a final molt into their winged adult form. They live for a few weeks, and the males screech all day long—which the females find attractive. They mate, the females inject their eggs beneath the bark of a tree, and they both die. The nymphs hatch and fall to the ground, where they burrow into the soil to grow and repeat the process. If you live in the South or Southwest, you see—and hear—the green or brown annual cicada. But in the middle of the US—and only here—a special cicada has evolved, with black bodies and red eyes. Two types exist: one lives underground for 13 years, and the other for 17. No one knows exactly how they time it, but billions emerge at once. Then, every 221 years, as in 2024, the 13- and 17-year cycles align … and they all come out together. The last time this happened, Thomas Jefferson was negotiating the Louisiana Purchase. If he knew what a racket he was in for, he might have rethought the deal.
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