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Cicadas are out in the trillions and citizen scientists are rejoicing

This spring, the once-in-221-years appearance of two cicada groups means swaths of the U.S. South and Midwest will be blanketed in the insects. For thousands of Americans, young and old, the emergence is offering a unique opportunity to engage their curiosity, lean into a sense of wonder, and get hands-on experiences learning about insect ecology.  

“Periodical cicadas are the gateway drug to natural history,” says Gene Kritsky, an entomologist and professor emeritus at Mount St. Joseph University in Cincinnati. An app he created, Cicada Safari, lets users submit geotagged cicada pictures, contributing to a live, crowdsourced map.  

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The rare emergence of two specific periodical cicada broods this year (which hasn’t happened since Thomas Jefferson was president) is inspiring some people to dive deeper into citizen science.

Steve Deacon, of Portland, Oregon, is leading a seven-person family trip to show his children and grandchildren the cicadas in central Illinois. 

Lake County Forest Preserves in Illinois opened a museum exhibit celebrating cicadas, and is sponsoring a CicadaFest. 

“The feeling used to be, ‘I want to stay away from the preserves during this time. I don’t want anything to do with cicadas,’” says Alyssa Firkus, director of education for the organization. “That has shifted, and it’s now, like, ‘I cannot wait to hear them come out. I want to see them.’”

As Randy Emmitt navigates a wooded lot, he notices a couple of things: patches of sunlight coming through the trees, and a near-inability to make out any sound other than a persistent screeching.

It doesn’t take long for him to duck inside his van, out of necessity.

“The cicadas are so loud,” he tells the Monitor over the phone from Hillsborough, North Carolina. “I can’t hear you.”

Why We Wrote This

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The rare emergence of two specific periodical cicada broods this year (which hasn’t happened since Thomas Jefferson was president) is inspiring some people to dive deeper into citizen science.

You can’t walk around without feeling like they’re practically on top of you, he says. 

But the swarms and piercing screams enveloping much of the Tar Heel State haven’t stopped Mr. Emmitt from doing what he loves – venturing out to track the insects down. Over the past couple weeks, he estimates he’s traveled to seven or eight counties to identify and photograph them, as well as the animals that have come out for a feeding frenzy. 

Mr. Emmitt is a handyman and proud citizen scientist, with a particular affinity for observing butterflies, dragonflies – and, this season only, periodical cicadas. Annual cicadas emerge each summer, but their periodical counterparts grow underground much longer. They come up for four-to-six-week mating stints every 13 or 17 years, depending on their life cycle. 

SOURCE:

U.S. Forest Service

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff

This spring, the once-in-221-years simultaneous appearance of two groups, Broods XIII and XIX, means swaths of the South and Midwest will be blanketed in cicadas. For Mr. Emmitt and thousands of Americans, young and old, the emergence is offering a unique opportunity to engage their curiosity, lean into a sense of wonder, and get hands-on experiences learning about insect ecology.  

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