lifewithchronicpain: feraladoration: sundayswiththeilluminati:aradiamegido:onenicebugperday: The onl
lifewithchronicpain: feraladoration: sundayswiththeilluminati:aradiamegido:onenicebugperday: The only time I want to be in a red stateSource Hate to ask any of my followers but why is this a big deal ? Oh man oh man SO.First of all it took me a few years to figure out that what I, a Mid-Atlantic native, knew as “cicadas” were not what everyone else knew as cicadas. What most places on Earth know as “cicadas” look like this:whereas what I know as cicadas are these:This is Magicicada septendecim, the 17-year periodical cicada. Many places have summer cicadas in moderation every year, but here on the North American Eastern Seaboard we save them all up for one MONSTER horde that only appears every 17 years. There are multiple broods of cicadas, so really a handful hatch every year, but the big one is BROOD X. Technically that means “Brood 10″ because cicada broods are labeled with Roman numerals, but BROOD X sounds much cooler and also evokes the right amount of batshit weirdness that occurs, because what occurs is the largest insect emergence in the world. Don’t take my word for it, take David Attenborough’s:When May comes in a cicada year, the cicadas. Are. EVERYWHERE. I mean every. where. Literal billions - possibly a trillion - of these big ole bugs dig their way up through every inch of soil on the East Coast, climb up the nearest object, then split their shells and spread new-grown wings to the first sun they’ve seen in almost two decades.And then they probably get eaten. 17-year cicadas use a survival strategy called “predator satiation” which literally means “they can’t eat us all.” Cicadas are a) huge b) dumb and c) defenseless, so to a predator they might as well be flying Snickers bars. But there are so many goddamn cicadas that no reasonable number of predators can eat them all. We think that’s why they converge on prime-number lifecycles - there are also 13-year periodical cicadas - because that way predators can’t line up shorter periodical lifecycles to take advantage of the cicada boom.So how are people not losing their shit when billions of bugs invade? Well, some do. But to make up for their frightening numbers, cicadas are so non-threatening they might as well have been designed by Disney. Plump, clumsy, and googly-eyed, these idiots don’t bite, don’t sting, can’t poison you, and don’t eat your plants. They don’t even fight each other - males join up rather than compete. Cicadas lack the survival instinct god gave a literal gnat and won’t so much as flinch at a human’s approach. You can pick one up off a leaf, hold it in your hand, play with it, put it in your little sister’s hair, whatever. Hell, they can barely fly; it’s more of a prolonged, hopeful lunge in the right direction. The worst they can do is careen into you midflight, possibly with a comical “bonk” sound, and flop to the ground hilariously. They are bad at everything.Except for one thing: YELL. Cicadas are here because it is Yelling Time. Now is the Time To Yell and by god that’s what they’re going to do and dear lord are they good at it. In a cicada year their atmospheric background hum quickly ramps up from “anime foley” to “neighbor mowing their lawn” to “drowning out a jet aircraft.” Every piece of greenery becomes an auditory hazard generating noise in proportion to its size. Got a big hedge? Now you have THE LOUDEST HEDGE. Beautiful shade tree in the front yard? Canopy of YELL, with a side order of cronch as you step on discarded chrysalises, dead cicadas, and live ones that are too stupid to move. And given that they’re about the thickness of a finger, stepping on one can be a gruesome experience. Don’t walk around barefoot, is what I’m saying.Thus for a few glorious weeks every seventeenth May the outdoors is ruled by screaming idiot bugs flapping around without a care in the world. The Yell functions as the world’s loudest matchmaking service to help the cicadas steadily pair off and mate. Then the females buzz away to lay their eggs on tree branches, the males probably get eaten now that they’ve served their purpose, and the shouting hedges gradually go quiet. The silent epilogue plays out a couple months later when the eggs hatch and the translucent white nymphs drop from the branches to burrow into soil and sleep, sipping from tree roots and catching up on their Netflix queue, for another 17 years. In conclusion, here’s Sir David Attenborough catfishing a cicada:Fly free, you beautiful dumbasses. Fly free. I like finding the empty larval cases on trees afterwards and using them in my creepy art Not where I live and that’s all that matters. -- source link