Current:Home > FinanceCicadas are back, but climate change is messing with their body clocks -PureWealth Academy
Cicadas are back, but climate change is messing with their body clocks
View
Date:2025-04-16 07:28:34
Billions of cicadas are emerging across about 16 states in the Southeast and Midwest. Periodical cicadas used to reliably emerge every 13 or 17 years, depending on their brood. But in a warming world where spring conditions arrive sooner, climate change is messing with the bugs' internal alarm clocks.
Scientists believe that cicadas count years through the change in fluid flow in tree roots, and when their year to emerge arrives, they stay underground until the soil temperature reaches 64 degrees Fahrenheit. Spring-like conditions now occur earlier, with the season warming 2 degrees Fahrenheit across the U.S. since 1970, according to Climate Central, a nonprofit researching climate change.
Spring arriving sooner means so are the cicadas. Last month, the cicadas' return started in Georgia nearly two weeks ahead of schedule before spreading north as far as the suburbs of Chicago. The Southwest has experienced the most spring warming, with locations in Nevada, Texas, and Arizona exceeding 6 degrees Fahrenheit of spring warming since 1970, according to Climate Central.
"In 2021, they emerged 11 days — almost two weeks — earlier," said biologist Gene Kritsky, who has been studying cicadas for decades. "This is true for Baltimore, for Washington, for Philadelphia, for Indianapolis."
Cicada watchers used to be able to predict their emergence as easily as astronomers could predict the recent solar eclipse. But that has become more challenging as the cicadas' patterns are changing as warm spring days happen more often.
In 2007, a midwinter warm spell in Ohio caused trees to prematurely start growing leaves, making the cicadas think an entire year had passed. Kritsky said this tricked them into counting the years wrong and, when true spring arrived months later, they emerged a year ahead of schedule.
"They had two fluid flows, so for them, it was 17 years," said Kritsky. "They didn't detect that there were only a few weeks between. They just detected that the fluid stopped and then started up again," said Kritsky.
Once they do make it back out to the world, they live for just a few weeks with one goal in mind: to make sure the species survives.
"They come up in massive numbers to overwhelm their predators. So the predators can eat every cicada they want, and there's still millions left to reproduce," said Kritsky.
- In:
- Cicadas
- Climate Change
Ben Tracy is CBS News' senior national and environmental correspondent based in Los Angeles. He reports for all CBS News platforms, including the "CBS Evening News with Norah O'Donnell," "CBS Mornings" and "CBS Sunday Morning."
TwitterveryGood! (76397)
Related
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Princess Anne hospitalized with minor injuries and a concussion
- Supreme Court won’t hear case claiming discrimination in Georgia Public Service Commission elections
- Are we ready to face an asteroid that could hit Earth in 14 years? NASA sees work to do.
- Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
- How many points did Caitlin Clark have? No. 1 pick sets Fever record with 13 assists
- Boebert faces first election Tuesday since switching districts and the vaping scandal
- Rare 1-3-5 triple play helps Philadelphia Phillies topple Detroit Tigers
- House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
- Missouri, Kansas judges temporarily halt much of President Biden’s student debt forgiveness plan
Ranking
- As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
- Defense rests for woman accused of killing her Boston officer boyfriend with SUV
- 'House of the Dragon' Cargyll twin actors explain deadly brother battle: Episode 2 recap
- Amazon Prime Day 2024: Everything We Know and Early Deals You Can Shop Now
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- A real photo took two honors in an AI competition. Here's the inside story.
- As more Texans struggle with housing costs, homeownership becoming less attainable
- Why did everyone suddenly stop using headphones in public?
Recommendation
EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
Top Cats: Panthers win their 1st Stanley Cup, top Oilers 2-1 in Game 7
Cliffhanger Virginia race between Good and Trump-backed challenger is too close to call
Chicago woman missing in Bahamas after going for yoga certification retreat, police say
McKinsey to pay $650 million after advising opioid maker on how to 'turbocharge' sales
Tennessee baseball completes climb from bottom of SEC to top of College World Series mountain
Dagestan, in southern Russia, has a history of violence. Why does it keep happening?
Who Is Shivon Zilis? Meet the Mother of 3 of Elon Musk's 12 Children