Cicada Occupation Is Here And They Are Covering Maryland's Sidewalks, Trees, Doors And Cars

LUTHERVILLE, Md. (AP/WJZ) -- The cicada occupation is just getting started. Some of the red-eyed flying insects, which come out once every 17 years, have begun to emerge. But bug experts say you ain't seen nothing yet.

This is Brood X (as in the Roman numeral 10), one of the largest groups of periodic cicadas. Some places already are overloaded, with singing bugs covering walls and trees. Elsewhere, the ground hasn't warmed enough for the cicadas to come out en masse.

But come out they will — by the billions, if not trillions, in 15 states, including Maryland. When they emerge from the soil, they shed their exoskeletons on trees and walls, leaving husks in their wake. And they can go everywhere: trees, doorsteps, sidewalks, cars and even on people who don't shoo them away.

Carly Schwartz sent us these photos of the cicadas outside her Lutherville home.

"I actually think they're fascinating," Schwartz said to WJZ in an email. "My kids don't like them very much and my dog wants to eat them!"

Now that there are so many, she said it's hard to walk outside because they are all over, including a lot of dead ones.

"I am treating this as a special event and trying to enjoy them!" Schwartz said.

Photos of cicadas in the Pine Valley/Valleywood area of Lutherville. Credit: Carly Schwartz
Photos of cicadas in the Pine Valley/Valleywood area of Lutherville. Credit: Carly Schwartz
Photos of cicadas in the Pine Valley/Valleywood area of Lutherville. Credit: Carly Schwartz

And then there are the eerie songs. The noise can sound like the soundtrack to a bad science fiction movie, but it's actually the males' mating call. The creatures are like hormone-hopped teenagers, said University of Maryland bug expert Mike Raupp, whose own neighborhood is already in full cicada explosion.

But other places are still waiting for the chorus and the onslaught, especially if they are farther away from warmer cities, says University of Connecticut bug scientist John Cooley.

Some people are spooked by them. Other people, like Raupp, eat them. Chefs have recipes. The University of Maryland has a cookbook if you are so inclined.

Most of these bugs will get eaten, but not by people. Birds, snakes, dogs, cats and even ants can feast on them.

Cooley says the spectacle is a sign that our ecosystem is still healthy despite climate change and biodiversity loss. These bugs have been coming out like this for millions of years. And the United States — with two small exceptions — is the only place that gets cicadas that come out every 17 or 13 years. Other places get them every year.

Enjoy or fear them while you can.

The bugs will be gone by around July 4, after the female lay eggs in tree branches. The eggs will hatch in July and August, the baby bugs will tumble to ground, burrow below the soil, feed off tree roots and stay hidden until 2038.

CBS News posted pictures from all over social media on the cicada tsunami.

(© Copyright 2021 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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