- My Forums
- Tiger Rant
- LSU Recruiting
- SEC Rant
- Saints Talk
- Pelicans Talk
- More Sports Board
- Fantasy Sports
- Golf Board
- Soccer Board
- O-T Lounge
- Tech Board
- Home/Garden Board
- Outdoor Board
- Health/Fitness Board
- Movie/TV Board
- Book Board
- Music Board
- Political Talk
- Money Talk
- Fark Board
- Gaming Board
- Travel Board
- Food/Drink Board
- Ticket Exchange
- TD Help Board
Customize My Forums- View All Forums
- Show Left Links
- Topic Sort Options
- Trending Topics
- Recent Topics
- Active Topics
Started By
Message
re: Cicadas are outta control
Posted on 5/18/24 at 1:29 pm to CatsGoneWild
Posted on 5/18/24 at 1:29 pm to CatsGoneWild

Posted on 5/18/24 at 1:30 pm to LegendInMyMind
I haven’t seen any here in Charleston.
Posted on 5/18/24 at 1:32 pm to Chucktown_Badger
quote:
I haven’t seen any here in Charleston.
They're in the western part of the state. The closer you get to the coast the less and less you see.
Posted on 5/18/24 at 1:35 pm to CatsGoneWild
Same. Nashville is being terrorized by these lil shits but my kids are obsessed with catching them.
Posted on 5/18/24 at 1:38 pm to CatsGoneWild
We need common sense cicada control...
... 100s of flame throwers.
[Donate to campus police to deal with LARP Hamas wannabes after they go away]
... 100s of flame throwers.
[Donate to campus police to deal with LARP Hamas wannabes after they go away]
Posted on 5/18/24 at 1:38 pm to LegendInMyMind
quote:
Yeah, they can be eaten. I've never partook in such, though
I looked at uncle Tony like he was nuts

Posted on 5/18/24 at 1:42 pm to I20goon
quote:
We need common sense cicada control...
... 100s of flame throwers.
Naw, they play an important role in soil fertility. These broods are large enough that their die off legitimately alters the ecosystem in a beneficial way.
Posted on 5/18/24 at 1:44 pm to CatsGoneWild
Haven't heard one in Oxford. I hear they are bad in East MS near Alabama though
Posted on 5/18/24 at 1:47 pm to schwartzy
quote:
It's the once in 13 year cicada outbreak (or once in 17 years). This isn't normal.
This year the 13 and 17 align.
Posted on 5/18/24 at 1:56 pm to CatsGoneWild
Jon Cicada fans? Best music at the dentists office.
Posted on 5/18/24 at 2:05 pm to TigerFanatic99
quote:
Naw, they play an important role in soil fertility. These broods are large enough that their die off legitimately alters the ecosystem in a beneficial way.
Their periodical emergence is interesting, and is still being studied by quite a few folks. The emergence on 13 and 17 year intervals isn't a happy accident. The fact that emergence of all periodcal cicadas occurs at specific intervals that are prime numbers is an important evolutionary development.
It has to do with predator availability. Most things in nature, especially breeding patterns and life expectancy, exist in a timeframe that revolves around even numbers. Predator satiation is why cicadas have evolved to emerge in such huge numbers. Their goal is to beat predation with shear numbers, predators just can't eat them all. That approach wouldn't work, however, if their emergence coincided with predictable population booms within predator species. It all comes down to the lifespan and mating habits of the predator species. By emerging on prime number years that don't coincide with population booms of predator species cicadas have evolved to center the mating aspect of their own lifecycles on times when the overall number of predator species is at their lowest in overall population.
Posted on 5/18/24 at 6:49 pm to CatsGoneWild
quote:
Thanks for that!!

Posted on 5/18/24 at 7:41 pm to CatsGoneWild
I haven't seen nor heard the first one this year. 

Posted on 5/18/24 at 7:45 pm to CatsGoneWild
Cicadas - the only thing that hasn’t invaded Texas .
Yet
Yet
Posted on 5/18/24 at 7:58 pm to CatsGoneWild
They don’t seem any worse than any other year down here in Baldwin County.
Posted on 5/18/24 at 8:10 pm to tilco
quote:
They don’t seem any worse than any other year down here in Baldwin County.
The farthest South AL observation on iNaturalist is from Thomasville over to Greenville. In MS it is from Jackson over to Meridian with just a few south of there.
This post was edited on 5/18/24 at 8:12 pm
Posted on 5/18/24 at 10:12 pm to dgnx6
quote:quote]I don’t even think we have locusts in the us. They are more of a giant grasshopper. But when I was younger we called the cicadas locusts. Idk why.[/quote]
[
You should see these big red and black bastards we get every year in Louisiana
This post was edited on 5/18/24 at 10:16 pm
Back to top
