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Brood Awakening: 17-Year Cicadas Emerge 4 Years Early

#1
C C Offline
https://www.scientificamerican.com/artic...ars-early/

EXCERPT: [...] Experts suspect a warming climate, with more warm weeks a year during which the underground nymphs can grow, could be triggering some cicadas to emerge ahead of their brood. “Temperature is everything,” says Marlene Zuk, an entomologist at the University of Minnesota. “When temperature changes, insects don’t just feel hot or cold. Their whole body doesn’t function normally.” And cicada nymphs may be growing to a threshold size so quickly that their internal biological clock is miscalculating when it is time to emerge, says Keith Clay, a biologist and cicada expert at Indiana University Bloomington. To calibrate these clocks, periodical cicadas likely rely on a variety of environmental cues such as changing seasons and ground temperature, he says. Nymphs feed on the xylem fluid (sap) from tree roots, and changes in the fluid composition as trees leaf out each spring may also help them gauge the passage of time. Entomologists reached this conclusion back in 2000 when they artificially sped up the blooming cycle of peach trees supporting cicada nymphs that were in their 15th year and tricked the insects into emerging a year early...
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#2
RainbowUnicorn Offline
(May 29, 2017 03:58 AM)C C Wrote: https://www.scientificamerican.com/artic...ars-early/

EXCERPT: [...] Experts suspect a warming climate, with more warm weeks a year during which the underground nymphs can grow, could be triggering some cicadas to emerge ahead of their brood. “Temperature is everything,” says Marlene Zuk, an entomologist at the University of Minnesota. “When temperature changes, insects don’t just feel hot or cold. Their whole body doesn’t function normally.” And cicada nymphs may be growing to a threshold size so quickly that their internal biological clock is miscalculating when it is time to emerge, says Keith Clay, a biologist and cicada expert at Indiana University Bloomington. To calibrate these clocks, periodical cicadas likely rely on a variety of environmental cues such as changing seasons and ground temperature, he says. Nymphs feed on the xylem fluid (sap) from tree roots, and changes in the fluid composition as trees leaf out each spring may also help them gauge the passage of time. Entomologists reached this conclusion back in 2000 when they artificially sped up the blooming cycle of peach trees supporting cicada nymphs that were in their 15th year and tricked the insects into emerging a year early...

i noticed that and just thought i had counted wrong.
maybe a DNA mutating pesticide ?
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#3
Zinjanthropos Offline
Love the sound of the cicadas. Such a big insect, scared the bejabbers out of my wife one day while golfing, when one landed on her arm. Witnessed a huge battle between a small wren and a cicada on my deck once. Little bird was trying to make a meal out of the bug, constantly jabbing at it while the cicada did a noisy spin around, unable to fly with damaged wing. Took a while but the bird got its dinner.

You know I always wonder if evolution takes part in any unusual creature activity. In this case I wonder if in previous years the 15 year cicada didn't make it and the 17 year model did. This time reversed. There's enough variation to cover the unexpected. Probably nothing but nature is full of surprises.
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