Is the cicada season over yet in Ohio? If you're reading this in Greater Cincinnati, you've probably seen the cicadas swarming around the city. After these adult cicadas mate, they will lay eggs, and ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. If you're getting irritated by the ear-piercing sound of this year's group of cicadas in and around Cincinnati and Southwest Ohio ...
Spring is in full gear with warmer temperatures, rainy weather and of course, the arrival of one of the noisiest insects. Neighborhoods in the eastern half of the United States have already begun ...
The cicadas are back – well, some of them. Brood XIV has begun to emerge in some eastern U.S. states. The brood emerges every 17 years, and is considered the second largest periodical cicada brood, ...
Cicadas will emerge this spring, and this year, Kentucky is at the epicenter. In 2025, Kentucky will see the emergence of Brood XIV (14) of the 17-year periodical cicadas. Sign up for our Newsletters ...
While portions of Greater Cincinnati might have escaped the swarm of cicadas in 2021, it's unlikely they'll be able to evade the emergence and ear-piercing sound of this year's group, Brood XIV. This ...
Cicadas are screaming across parts of Cincinnati and beyond.The Brood XIV cicadas have emerged and are causing chaos in parts of the region.Many have noticed - it's hard not to - their cicada symphony ...
(THE CONVERSATION) If they’re in your area, you’ll know it from their loud droning, chirping and buzzing sounds. Cicadas from Brood XIV – one of the largest groups of cicadas that emerge from ...
Neal J. Riley is a digital producer for CBS Boston. He has been with WBZ-TV since 2014. His work has appeared in The Boston Globe and The San Francisco Chronicle. Neal is a graduate of Boston ...
Cicadas have emerged in large numbers across Cincinnati, Southwest Ohio, Northern Kentucky, and Southeast Indiana. The 17-year periodical cicadas, Brood XIV, are expected to die off in mid-June, about ...
Brood XIV cicadas, appearing for the first time since 2008, are emerging in the eastern U.S. Sightings are concentrated in western North Carolina, southern Kentucky, and parts of Tennessee. While the ...