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Brood X cicada recipes add extra crunch to your meals Want a taste?

Brood X cicada recipes add extra crunch to your meals. Want a taste? CNET 1 hr ago © Provided by CNET Your next meal awaits. Richard Ellis/Getty Images In case you haven t heard, trillions of Brood X cicadas are emerging for the first time in 17 years this spring. These critters spend the majority of their lives underground and come out for at least three to four weeks for a massive mating frenzy, and they re showing up in 15 US states and Washington, DC, leading some to turn to pest control. But there s another perhaps more, let s say, natural way to manage this massive insect emergence: eat them.

Billions of bugs: Meet the cicada chasers trailing Brood X

Billions of bugs: Meet the cicada chasers trailing Brood X
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Billions of bugs: Meet the cicada chasers trailing Brood X

Billions of bugs: Meet the cicada chasers trailing Brood X CNET 2 hrs ago © Alex Wong/Getty Images The red-eyed bugs of Brood X, which will soon emerge by the millions. The cicada chasers are ready.   For Dan Mozgai, a marketing professional from New Jersey, the perfect vacation involves insects. Lots and lots of insects.  They can t be just any random bugs, though. They have to be periodical cicadas.  The critters spend almost their whole lives underground, living on sap from tree roots. Then, in the spring of their 13th or 17th year, depending on the brood, they tunnel out, synchronously and in huge numbers, for a short adult mating frenzy set to the sonorous sound track of the males come-hither calls.

Billions of Cicadas to invade District of Columbia after 17 years underground -- Science & Technology -- Sott net

© STOCK IMAGE/Joseph Squillante/Getty Images A cicada climbs on a tree trunk in an undated stock image. Entomologist Eric Day says the insects could create a substantial noise issue in some communities. In April 2004, Mean Girls was playing in theaters and Yeah! by Usher was topping the Billboard music charts. At the same time, around the mid-Atlantic region, small holes in the ground were opening up from which billions of bulky, red-eyed, winged insects would emerge, readying for a bacchanal of singing and mating and reminding humans of a horror movie. As the summer of 2004 waned, so did the lifespan, just a few weeks long, of those adult cicadas, and the larvae of the next generation dropped back to the earth where they would spend the next 17 years.

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