Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Cicadas are on the move in central Kentucky and beyond as they emerge across the state after 17 years spent waiting for a chance ...
CYNTHIANA — Eight inches below ground, a buggy bomb ticks away. Millions of periodical cicadas bide their time, feasting on tree roots and counting the years. They don’t wear watches or keep calendars ...
Certain sounds of nature are just unmistakable. A Carolina wren in the pre-dawn hours. Spring peepers on a warm April evening. Or an owl hooting late at night. The warmer days ahead are also filled ...
For Illinois, the answer is probably not. But Indiana and other parts of the Midwest may not be so lucky. An interactive map created the University of Connecticut shows where Brood XIV, the ...
You might not be hearing that high-pitched buzz of cicadas in New Mexico this summer, though it will be ringing the ears of Easterners. The 17-year periodical Brood XIV cicadas will be unearthed by ...
An adult cicada with large red eyes perches at the top of a daylily in Menifee County. George Campbell George Campbell Cicadas are on the move in central Kentucky and beyond as they emerge across the ...
Periodical cicadas, Brood XIV, emerge in parts of the eastern U.S. every 17 years. Scientists study cicadas to understand their unique life cycle, timekeeping abilities, and response to climate change ...
Cicadas are on the move in central Kentucky and beyond as they emerge across the state after 17 years spent waiting for a chance to mate. Parts of central and eastern Kentucky will be the epicenter of ...