Cicada Watch is brought to you by CoryWest Media, a marketing/PR consultancy in the western suburbs of Chicago.
Entries and images by Barbara Rozgonyi, founder of CoryWest Media and animal/insect lover. Enjoy!
05.28.08
Because traffic is picking up for this post, that tells me that the cicadas are on their way out somewhere, but not here. I miss them and I have to admit that I was one of the last ones who thought they could hear and see cicadas. Was I out of it? Maybe, maybe not. I do remember my last conversation about cicadas in late June 2007.
When I picked up our youngest son at the train on his way back from a trip to New Orleans, a passenger waiting to get on asked me, “Aren’t you glad to see the cicadas go?” I said, “Not really. I think I’ll try to find them next year.” He shook his head, the train pulled in. He got on, my son got off.
Almost a year has gone by. According to the Associated Press, Brood XIV is expected to appear in at least parts of Georgia, Kentucky, Indiana, Massachusetts, Maryland, North Carolina, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Virginia and West Virginia.
My efforts to protect our small trees didn’t work. Munching most of the tender growth killed one and reduced to other to a stick with sparse leaves. So, if you’re in these areas and you love your trees, make sure your netting is secure. And, enjoy ’em while they last. Just think twice about drinking a cicada-tini or crunching on chocolate covered bugs.
06.21.07
Happy first day of summer! Thanks to the 500 people who’ve read this post! Yes, the cicadas are still here and my netting is still flapping around needing a fix every other day or so. I’m wondering how much my family will suffer withdrawal from the cicadium rhythm while we’re in Florida in vacation. When we come back they should be gone. We’ll see what we hear . . .
06.05.07 Update
Check out Live Search image results for “cicada in Chicago.” Today, one of my images in the top row. When I find the time, I’ll upload an album. Although photography is my favorite hobby – not my primary occupation, I have sold some images, including a butterfly now being used by nicor.
Live Search image results for cicadas in Chicago. I like the way you can resize the images and add them to a scratchpad collection. Serious photographers would want to add a watermark or copyright to prevent unapproved use of their images.
06.04.07 Update
You can’t make noise when your wings are wet. . . if you’re a cicada. Today, a mid-afternoon thunderstorm drowned out the buzz for a few hours after the drenching.
And, I think the decibel meter hit its climax over the weekend.
“Deafening” is the only word that describes the rising and unceasing roar settled in the trees at the back of our property. On Saturday, our graduation party guests ventured out only to examine the cicada shells and mating pairs on our deck for brief visits. Then, it was back inside to the blaring iPod pop music.
Visit the Chicago Tribune’s Cicada Central site for videos, photos and the latest – a blue-eyed cicada.
05.29.07 Update
Video facts: 1.5 million per acre; each one can make a sound as loud as a motorcyle or lawnmower; 1 calorie each and high in protein; shows people drink cicadatinis
Animals at Brookfield Zoo crunch on cicadas from Yahoo! News
“These days, a host of animals from bearded dragon lizards to African wild dogs to white-crested laughing thrush birds are enjoying cicadas.”
Congrats to Brookfield Zoo, our favorite, for their “cicada smorgasbord” coverage.
05.20.07
It’s beautiful, really. Not the bugs, they’re not here yet. It’s the netting that drapes, shapes and hugs shrubberies and trees. Protective veiling . . . in black, pink, white, green and teal cloaks woody matter that wears green only in warmer seasons. Although my middle son, our in-house forestry expert, is concerned about the cicadas eating our already half-dead small river birch, I am not. There’s no tellling what they’ll decide to eat so why should I net my trees?
05.22.07
Made an emergency run to get tulle for the trees. Jo Ann Fabrics is sold out of netting at all of their stores in the area. Calls to other fabric stores confirmed my husband’s hunch: there is a run on netting. Found a store that said they were stocked, but I had to get there – fast. Bought 12 yards of cranberry bridal viel fabric at $1.99/yard – with a 30% discount. Grabbed two spools of pink ribbon to dress up the trees. Also snagged four new lamps at 70% off – total cost: $81.62
5.23.07
Several cicadas lounging on the deck chairs. Net from the trees opens. I close it up. Driving out of the driveway to play practice, my daughter notices that I am trapping cicadas in with the trees. I free two cicadas and rewrap the tree.
Squirrels and chipmunks charge the house – one tries to get in the dining room window. I make a tray of mini peanut butter sandwiches and toss them around the back yard.
Climbing the hill of stairs to the high school, my family avoids the carcesses and we make no attempt to count the thousands of casualties.
5.24.07
Walking to school in a strange, jerky movies, high school students appear to have been affected with a strange silly walk virus overnight. I realize they’re attempting to dodge dead cicadas.
At 9:17 a.m., I hear a strange buzzing in the house. A cicada is on the floor of our dining room. Grabbing a plastic A&W root beer cup, I trap the critter and release it outdoors. The cat is very disappointed. . . will think about capturing a few friends for her to play with now that she is an indoor cat.
Caught ten cicadas – inside one of my tree nets. Don’t know who’s happier they’re free – me or the bug-eyed bugs. My neighbor, Gloria the gardener, comes over to help me rewrap the tree for the third time. She assures me we’ve got it and thinks the ribbons are classy.
After we recloak the tree, she shows me all of the cicadas standing on end in her lawn. Although I’m wearing sandals, I tred lightly to get photos for the blog.
I’m wondering if I have enough chairs inside the house to hold all of party guests next weekend. There is no way they’ll want to walk on our lawn, especially if I don’t let it get mowed. I hate killing insects.
Connecting Cicadas to PR
Noisy . . . dramatic . . . eventful . . . massive . . . community-minded . . . cicadas attract and demand attention.
Cicadas are the most efficient and loudest sound-producing insects in the world. Conversely, some small species have songs so high in pitch that the noise is inaudible to humans. Only the males resound as a mating ritual to attract a female and many cicada species tend to gather when calling which increases the total volume of noise. Species have different mating songs to ensure they attract the appropriate mate.
Cicadae are unique in sound-producing insects in that they have a musical drum in their abdomen. The organs that produce sound are ‘tymbals‘ ~ paired membranes that are ribbed and located at the abdominal base. Contracting the internal tymbal muscles yield a pulse of sound as the tymbals buckle inwards. As these muscles relax, the tymbals return to their original position. The interior of the male abdomen is substantially hollow to amplify the resonance of the sound. The song intensity of the louder cicadas acts as an effective bird repellent. Males of many species tend to gather which net a greater sound intensity and engenders protection from avian predators.
In addition to the mating song, many species also have a distinct distress call, usually a somewhat broken and erratic sound emitted when an individual is seized. A number of species also have a courtship song, which is often a quieter call and is produced after a female has been drawn by the calling song.
Cicada Facts: Understanding the Invasion from National Geographic News
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12 thoughts on “Chicago Cicada Watch Journal”
I would like to see a continuation of the topic
Thanks for your interest – are you a cicada lover, too?
Here’s where to find Cicada Brood XIV in 2008:
States Effected: KY, GA, IN, MA, MD, NC, NJ, NY, OH, PA, TN, VA, WVA
More maps at: http://members.fortunecity.com/cicadaman1999/id47.htm
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Have to say I miss the noisy, messy cicadas – and all the hype. I know I’m mostly alone in that. 🙂
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