You’ve probably heard about the cicadas taking over New Jersey and other parts of the country. It’s part of the 17 year cycle. I read all about their lifecycle on Wikipedia.
Last week we spotted the first few nymphs emerging from the ground. A block away there were reports of massive molting, and a few started appearing on our block. For us, the change was last night/this morning. On the walk to school there was a definite change. You have to look down if you want to avoid stepping on them. They were littering our front walk way. I’ve heard this will get much worse. They aren’t making noise yet and the ground isn’t undulating with the creatures.
Apparently these are called nymph shells. After the bug crawls out of the earth (almost a foot down), they shed their skins and become adults. You can see those skins everywhere, from the ground to the grass, to tree trunks and telephone poles to tires.
The adults mate and head to the trees (see photos below of them in the trees). The female lays hundreds of eggs in slits she makes in the bark/branches. The things that come out of those hatched eggs drop to the ground and burrow down. Then they emerge in 17 years when the ground temperature is 64. They live off tree root juice. These bugs are disgusting, but amazing.
My daughter began collecting the shells.
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Lots of people eat cicadas. The Washington Post did a taste test. They taste like asparagus or shrimp. Not that I tried it (nor will I). Estimates are a million of cicadas per acre. That’s a lot of cicada shells and carcases, after they shed, mate and die. Cure world hunger! Eat our cicadas!

This transformed from a pale yellow new adult, to this ugly thing in about 3 hours. Copyright Deborah Abrams Kaplan

Newly emerged adult, pale and yellow. The transformation to dark and ugly is very quick – a few hours. Copyright Deborah Abrams Kaplan

They molt in the grass, on the trees, on bushes, on telephone poles, on tires…Copyright Deborah Abrams Kaplan
By: Deborah Abrams Kaplan
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