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Editor’s note: Following is a month-by-month look back at the top local news stories from 2021 as reported by The Times-Gazette. We wish our readers ....
Cicadas’ Brood X rising up AIM Media Midwest ODNR COLUMBUS – The so-called “Brood X” cicadas are set to emerge in parts of western and central Ohio after 17 years underground, according to the Ohio Department of Natural Resources (ODNR). The cicadas will begin to emerge when the soil, eight inches beneath the ground, reaches 64 degrees Fahrenheit. This typically happens between late-April and mid-May. Shortly after emerging, cicadas will climb a vertical surface, like tree trunks, shed their exoskeletons, and develop into winged adults. The dried, shed exoskeletons are orangish in color and may remain in place or on the ground for several weeks. ....
Brood X on its way sort of: We’ll soon see and hear cicadas, but just wait ‘til 2025 News Journal COLUMBUS – The so-called “Brood X” cicadas are set to emerge in parts of western and central Ohio after 17 years underground, according to the Ohio Department of Natural Resources (ODNR). The cicadas will begin to emerge when the soil, eight inches beneath the ground, reaches 64 degrees Fahrenheit. This typically happens between late-April and mid-May. Shortly after emerging, cicadas will climb a vertical surface, like tree trunks, shed their exoskeletons, and develop into winged adults. The dried, shed exoskeletons are orangish in color and may remain in place or on the ground for several weeks. ....
The cicadas are coming By Jacob Clary - [email protected] Cicadas like this one are expected to hatch this year from Georgia to New York and as far west as the Mississippi River. OSU Extension photo Spring and summer bring many things. Blooming flowers, warmer weather but some summers also bring the buzzing of cicadas. Cicadas in the area this year will be even louder than in previous years because of Brood X, which is this year’s version of the periodical cicada. Brood X, or Brood 10, is a version of the periodical cicada that only comes up from the ground once every 17 years. ....
Ohio Department of Agriculture The Brood X cicada emerges once every 17 years in Ohio and other Appalachian and Great Lakes states. An insect that hasn t seen the surface since George W. Bush s first term as president is starting to reemerge, and Ohioans are more likely to hear them than to spot them in the wild. The Brood X cicada, last seen in the U.S. in 2004, is making its once-every-17-year appearance. And while they don t do much physical damage, they re hard to miss. They re not a financial nuisance, unless you get tired of them for the four weeks that they re hear and you want to move away, says Ryan Larrick, a survey technician who studies insect damage for the Ohio Department of Agriculture. ....