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  2. Bug haters, beware: After 200 years, the cicadas are ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/bug-haters-beware-200-years...

    A professor in Ohio has created a free app, Cicada Safari, so users can upload photos of the insects and track where the biggest numbers emerge. ... humans have already impacted cicada species.

  3. Trillions of cicadas to emerge in coming months, some in ...

    www.aol.com/news/trillions-cicadas-emerge-coming...

    No, this isn't something from the Book of Revelations — locusts and cicadas are separate species. Cicadas have the longest life cycle of any insect, waiting 13 or 17 years to emerge.

  4. Are cicadas harmful to humans or pets? How long will they be ...

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  5. Cicadas come with an itchy pest — tiny mites that can cause ...

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    This year's cicada emergence was a double whammy of insects, with two groups of periodical cicadas that only come out of the ground every 13 or 17 years making a simultaneous appearance. But even ...

  6. Giant cicada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giant_cicada

    Quesada gigas, Giant Cicada, México Quesada gigas, Giant Cicada, Argentina. The giant cicada (Quesada gigas), also known as the chichara grande, coyoyo, or coyuyo, is a species of large cicada native to North, Central, and South America. One of two species in the genus Quesada, it is the widest ranging cicada in the Western Hemisphere. [1]

  7. Cassini periodical cicadas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cassini_periodical_cicadas

    Cassini-type cicadas are especially common in the most southwestern populations and are the only 17-year cicada species found in Oklahoma and Texas. [ 7 ] Cassini-type cicadas are most often found in deciduous lowland woods and flood plains, rather than the upland woods favored by other Magicicada.

  8. Feeling itchy? Tiny mites may bite humans more after cicada ...

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    The first oak leaf itch mite-related rashes on humans after a periodical cicada brood emergence was in 2007 in the Chicago area, the last time Brood XIII emerged, according an Illinois Department ...

  9. Massospora - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Massospora

    It includes more than a dozen obligate, sexually transmissible pathogenic species that infect (and kill) adult gregarious cicadas worldwide. At least two species are known to produce psychoactive compounds during infection: [7] [8] M. cicadina is known to produce cathinone; M. platypediae or M. levispora produces psilocybin. [9]