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Brood X cicadas light up national weather radar as U S grapples with swarms: We were getting over 2,000 a day

Brood X cicadas light up national weather radar as U.S. grapples with swarms: We were getting over 2,000 a day June 9, 2021 / 8:22 AM / CBS News Cicada mania in full swing The massive invasion of Brood X cicadas now has the insects swarming large areas of the East and Midwest.  Coming up from the ground once every 17 years, their numbers are so large in the Baltimore-Washington area they re even showing up on National Weather Service radar. You may have noticed a lot of fuzziness (low reflectivity values) on our radar recently. The Hydrometeor Classification algorithm shows much of it to be Biological in nature. Our guess? It s probably the #cicadas. pic.twitter.com/i990mEBJnl NWS Baltimore-Washington (@NWS BaltWash) June 5, 2021

Cicadas light up weather radar as U S grapples with swarms

Cicadas light up weather radar as U.S. grapples with swarms CBSNews © Credit: CBSNews 1623240686403.png The massive invasion of Brood X cicadas now has the insects swarming large areas of the East and Midwest.  Coming up from the ground once every 17 years, their numbers are so large in the Baltimore-Washington area they re even showing up on National Weather Service radar. We were getting over 2,000 a day, Maryland mom Jessica Helms told CBS News Ben Tracy after cicadas took over her backyard. © Provided by CBS News 6-year-old Olivia began counting the cicadas in her backyard but quickly ran out of fingers and buckets to collect their shells. / Credit: CBS News

Brood X Cicadas Light Up National Weather Radar As US Grapples With Swarms: We Were Getting Over 2,000 A Day

Brood X Cicadas Light Up National Weather Radar As US Grapples With Swarms: We Were Getting Over 2,000 A Day
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Cicada sculptures emerge as bugs take flight in parts of the US

Cicada sculptures emerge as bugs take flight in parts of the US and last updated 2021-06-01 14:46:54-04 BALTIMORE, Md. — In neighborhoods and city parks in parts of the country, Americans are being greeted by the distinct buzzing sound of cicadas emerging after nearly two decades of growing underground. And their reemergence has become an inspiration for an unusual public art exhibit in Baltimore, Maryland. That sound that millions of Americans are hearing as cicadas emerge from hibernation is the male species of the bug working as quickly as possible to attract a female to mate with. They have six weeks to live before they die.

View from the North 40: Animals sing the songs of their people

View from the North 40: Animals sing the songs of their people   We all have a voice, and for good, bad or weird animals do too. NPR’s Madeline Sofia talked March 25 to U.S. Department of Agriculture entomologist Sammy Ramsey about cicadas because the annual cicada hatch is coming up soon, and this should be a big year a big, noisy year, even for the notoriously noisy insect. Cicadas, Ramsey said, come in 23 different broods, or types, that hatch every 13 or 17 years, depending on the particular type of cicada. Brood X, which stands for 10, is the largest brood that is on a 17-year cycle and it’s fixing to hatch across 15 states in late April.

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