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                                  THE

                              PERIODICAL

                                CICADA


                          The 17-Year Locust


           U.S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE • Leaflet No. 310




THE PERIODICAL CICADA


No other insect in North America excites as much curiosity and wonder
as does the periodical cicada when it makes its sudden, springtime
appearance at intervals of 17 or 13 years.

After years of living in underground tunnels, millions of cicadas issue
from the earth as if by a predetermined signal, undergo startling
transformations, and spread through nearby trees and bushes. From
morning till night they fill the air with their weird, droning song. In
a few weeks, after mating and laying eggs, they die.

The periodical cicada, often erroneously called the 17-year locust,
is widely distributed over the eastern half of the United States,
and occurs nowhere else in the world. In the North its life cycle is
completed in 17 years; in the South the cycle is completed in 13 years.

The adult insect is about 1-5/8 inches long. Most of its body is black.
The legs are reddish, some of the veins in the nearly transparent wings
are orange, and the eyes are red.

The periodical cicada, known scientifically as _Magicicada
septendecim_, is closely related to common cicadas, which appear every
year. The common cicadas, called harvest flies and dog-day cicadas,
appear later in the season than the periodical, and the adults live
longer. Their whirring song, which is slightly similar to that of the
periodical cicadas, but has less variation in the notes, is a "lazy"
sound that we associate with the languorous days of late summer.

Cicadas have a beak for piercing plant tissue and drawing sap into
their bodies. They are large relatives of leafhoppers, aphids, scales,
and other sucking insects.


Some Misconceptions

The dramatic and bizarre elements in the life cycle of the periodical
cicada have caused the insect to be regarded, not only with curiosity,
but also with superstition and fear.

Even before the white man came to North America, the Indians thought
its periodic appearance had an evil significance.

Early American colonists had never seen the periodical cicada. They
were familiar with the Biblical story of locust plagues in Egypt, but
were not sure what kind of insect the story referred to. When the
cicadas appeared suddenly by the millions, some of the colonists
thought a "locust plague" had been visited upon them.

To some extent the confusion between cicadas and locusts exists today;
cicadas are commonly called locusts. The term "locust" is correctly
applied only to certain species of grasshoppers. Migratory locusts,
which comprise one of these species, ruined crops in Egypt in Biblical
times. They still damage crops in that country and in many other parts
of the world.

Even when the periodical cicada is not confused with some other insect,
its appearance in overwhelming numbers arouses fear that crops will be
destroyed. But the cicada does not feed on foliage of any kind. If the
adults feed at all, they do so by inserting their beaks in bark and
sucking juice. Although the adults cause no feeding damage, the adult
females make injurious punctures in twigs and limbs of trees and bushes
with their egg-laying apparatus.

A false belief that is much less widely held today than formerly is
that the distinct black =W= toward the outer end of the front wings
foretells war. The mark is a characteristic of the species, and is
produced by deeper pigmentation of the veins.

The cicada cannot sting, and any story is mythical that tells of
cicadas poisoning fruit by stinging it.


How Cicadas Develop

Using the blades of a curved, sawlike egg-laying apparatus on the end
of the abdomen, the female cicada punctures the bark of a twig and
makes a pocket in the wood. In the pocket she lays 24 to 28 eggs in
2 rows. She then moves forward, cuts another pocket, and lays more
eggs. She continues this process until 5 to 20 pockets have been made
in the twig. The pockets are placed close together in a straight row.
Sometimes they form a continuous slit 2 or 3 inches long. Moving from
one twig to another, a cicada lays a total of 400 to 600 eggs.

The eggs are laid in twigs and small branches of a wide variety of
trees and plants. They hatch in 6 to 7 weeks. The immature insects are
called nymphs.

[Illustration: Section through egg punctures showing rows of eggs About
5 times natural size.]

The newly hatched nymphs fall to the ground and burrow until they find
suitable roots, from which they suck juice. This is the beginning of a
17- or 13-year period of underground existence. Most of the nymphs are
18 to 24 inches beneath the surface.

[Illustration: Nymph ready for transformation.]

[Illustration: Adult beginning to issue from nymphal skin.]

[Illustration: Adult nearly free from nymphal skin.]

[Illustration: Freshly transformed adult.]

By spring of the 17th or 13th year the nymphs are fully grown. The
transformation to the adult stage of the life cycle is soon to occur.
Several weeks before emerging from the ground, the nymphs start
burrowing upward. When they have burrowed to about an inch beneath the
surface, they stop and await the proper time to continue.

When the proper night comes, in April or May, the nymphs leave the
ground in vast numbers and head for upright objects. A tree is the
ideal goal if it can be attained. But the transformation from nymph to
adult cannot be delayed. If a tree is not within range, a bush or a
weed, a blade of grass, or even a post or a telegraph pole, will do.
The nymph secures a good hold on the object, splits its nymphal skin
along the middle of the back, and laboriously works itself out. The
job of shedding the nymphal skin is completed in an hour or less. The
cicada is now an adult, but is soft and white. It hardens and becomes
darker. In a few hours it is fully mature.

The insects mate within a week after becoming adults. A few days after
mating, the females lay eggs.

The adults live 5 or 6 weeks.

Not all cicadas pass through all the stages of development. Many eggs
do not hatch. Some nymphs never get established on roots, and some die
while trying to shed their nymphal skins.


When They Appear

Latitude and elevation produce the conditions that determine the date
on which cicadas come out of the ground. In some southern areas the
period of emergence begins in the last week of April. In some northern
areas it begins in the last week of May. Between these early and late
extremes, periods of emergence occur elsewhere. The farther north the
cicadas are, the later they emerge.

The fact that periodical cicadas in the North have a 17-year life
cycle, and those in the South a 13-year cycle, should not be
interpreted to mean that the insect is seen only at 17-year intervals
in the North and only at 13-year intervals in the South. The insects
emerge somewhere almost every year. The explanation is that there are
different broods, which emerge in different years.

[Illustration: Adult several hours after transformation.]

Cicadas of the 17-year race that emerge in any given year comprise a
brood, those that emerge the next year comprise another brood, and so
on. The same is true of the 13-year race.

While adults of one brood are singing in the trees, other broods, in
different stages of development, are in the soil--perhaps close by,
perhaps hundreds of miles away. They will emerge when they have passed
their allotted time in the soil.

Most of the broods are separated geographically, but some overlap.

The number of cicadas emerging in successive years is not maintained at
anything like an even level. Four of the 17 "possible" 17-year broods
are referred to by such terms as "doubtful," "unimportant," and "almost
extinct." We have only scattered records concerning them, and one or
more may be extinct. Only two of the 13-year broods are large; a few
others exist, but the exact number is not known.

In some years two broods emerge--one in the North and one in the South.


Where They Appear

The range of the periodical cicada covers nearly all the United States
east of the Missouri Valley, and includes Arkansas and Louisiana.

There is considerable overlapping between the 17- and 13-year races.

Most broods are limited to fairly definite areas, but some consist
of small, widely scattered colonies. Moreover, there are scattered
colonies that seem to have little connection with large regional
broods; nevertheless, when such a colony appears, it is considered to
be a part of whatever brood appears the same year.

For convenience of reference the broods have been designated by Roman
numerals. The numerals I through XVII are assigned to the 17-year
broods, and XVIII through XXX to the 13-year broods. They are assigned
as though a brood were to emerge each year, but, as previously
mentioned, there may be gaps, especially in the 13-year broods.

Numbering of the 17-year broods under the present system began with the
1893 brood, which was designated brood I. The 1894 brood was brood II,
the 1895 brood was brood III, and so on. In 1909 brood XVII appeared,
and in 1910 brood I appeared again.

The following listing shows the more important broods, the area in
which each occurs, the year of the last emergence (up to 1953), and the
year in which the next emergence is due.

Brood I--a small brood that occurs principally in southeastern
Pennsylvania, Maryland, northeastern West Virginia, Virginia, and
western North Carolina; 1944, 1961.

Brood II--occurs along the eastern seaboard from Connecticut and
southeastern New York to North Carolina; 1945, 1962.

Brood V--a compact brood that occurs in the eastern half of Ohio and
throughout West Virginia except in the extreme southern part; 1948,
1965.

Brood VIII--occurs in western Pennsylvania, eastern Ohio, and the
northern Panhandle of West Virginia; 1951, 1968.

Brood IX--occurs in West Virginia, western Virginia, and northwestern
North Carolina; 1952, 1969.

Brood X--the largest brood; occurs in abundance over much of the
northeastern quarter of the United States; 1936, 1953.

Brood XIX--occurs over much of the southern part of the United States;
extends into the southern part of Illinois and to northern Missouri;
1946, 1959.

Brood XXIII--occurs in the Mississippi Valley from southern Indiana,
southern Illinois, and Missouri to the Gulf; 1950, 1963.


The Cicada's Song

A few days after the periodical cicadas appear, their incessant
drumming, or singing, is heard. Only the males have sound-producing
apparatus, which consists of two shell-like inflated drums on the sides
of the abdomen. Two strong muscles set the drums in motion.

The chorus begins at dawn. As the temperature rises, the volume swells.
Throughout the day a blanket of sound rests over the countryside. In
the evening the sound ceases.

When heard from a distance, the cicada chorus is a whirring, droning
monotone. But if attention is concentrated on an individual insect,
several notes can be distinguished. The loudest is represented by the
syllables "tsh-ee-EEEE-e-ou." It is sustained 15 to 20 seconds. The
middle portion is loud and shrill.

Another note is represented by "AH-O-oo." It has a mournful quality,
and terminates abruptly in a lowered pitch. It is usually sustained
about 3 seconds, and is repeated at intervals of 2 to 5 seconds.

Other notes consist of prolonged burring, which is the basic sound of
the cicada, and soft, short purrs.

To begin a note, the cicada lifts its abdomen (the back part of the
body) to a rigid, horizontal position. When the sound ends, the abdomen
drops back to the usual, somewhat sagging position.


Damage to Trees

The egg-laying habits of the female cicada, which have been described,
can cause severe damage or even destruction to young, transplanted
trees in nurseries and orchards, and some damage to older trees.

Egg punctures can cause the twigs and branches of small, immature
trees to wilt; and the wounds can give ingress to disease and serve as
shelters and feeding locations for scale insects, woolly aphids, and
other insects.

Twigs in which many egg pockets are made are often broken or partly
broken from the tree. Sonic fruit is lost from bearing trees that have
been severely injured.

Seventy or eighty species of trees, shrubs, and herbaceous plants
harbor the eggs of the cicada. Those for which the female seems to have
a preference are oak, hickory, apple, peach, pear, and grape.

Cicadas cause no visible feeding damage to plants and trees.


Reducing the Damage

The insecticides Sevin and TEPP are effective against the cicada,
Sevin being preferred when residue restrictions do not prevent its
use because of its much greater residual effectiveness. Use Sevin to
protect ornamental plants, shade trees, and some fruit trees (apples,
pears, peaches, plums, prunes, and cherries), and grapes, for which a
tolerance has been approved. Otherwise, use TEPP.

=CAUTION.=--Sevin and TEPP are poisonous. Read and follow all
precautions on the label. TEPP is extremely dangerous to handle.
Serious illness, or even death, may result if it is swallowed, inhaled,
or absorbed through the skin.

Sevin has long residual value against the cicada. One application
applied when egg-laying begins will afford protection for 1 to 3 weeks,
depending on the degree of infestation. Repeat applications only after
reinfestation is evident. To prepare a Sevin spray, mix 2 pounds of a
50-percent wettable powder with 100 gallons of water.

TEPP acts only on direct contact with the insect. It does not affect
insects that come to the tree after the spray has dried, thus orchards
close to woodlands have to be sprayed almost daily. Orchards further
from heavy infestations can be protected reasonably well by three or
four applications a week apart. TEPP is most effective if applied early
in the day, before the cicadas become active. Prepare a TEPP spray by
mixing one-half pint of a 20-percent concentrate, or one-fourth pint of
a 40-percent concentrate, with 100 gallons of water.

Orchard trees 1 or 2 years old may be protected by covering them with
open-weave cloth, such as heavy cheese-cloth, netting, tobacco shade
cloth, or the cloth used to cover tobacco seed-beds in the South. The
cloth should be put in place as the cicadas begin to appear and should
remain until, about 5 weeks later, most of them are gone.

Many growers refrain from planting orchards in a cicada year, or in
the preceding year. Before postponing the planting of trees, they
should consider cloth protection. The cost may be less than the loss
represented by 1 or 2 years of delay in the development of a new
orchard.

If little or no pruning is done to large trees the winter preceding an
infestation, much of the injured wood can be pruned away the following
winter.

In residential areas where the cicadas have previously been abundant,
it is advisable not to plant young shrubs or trees around the home the
year another emergence is expected.


Natural Enemies

Birds destroy many cicadas. Where cicadas are numerous and birds rather
few, as in dense woods, cicadas are not materially reduced. Where
the situation is reversed, as in small, open groves, or near houses,
cicadas may be greatly reduced by birds.

Insects and mites attack cicada eggs, and a fungus disease kills some
adults.


Prepared by Entomology Research Division, Agricultural Research Service


Washington, D.C.


Issued May 1953 Slightly revised May 1960

U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE: 1960


For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing
Office Washington 25, D.C. - Price 5 cents


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Transcriber Notes

All illustrations were moved so as to not split paragraphs.