Cicada

Cicada
Floury baker, Abricta curvicosta
Scientific classification
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Cicadidae
A 17-year cicada, or Magicicada
Cicada found in Chicago, Illinois, USA, June 2007

Cicadas are small insects. They are kinds of true bugs.

The noisy buzz they make is the male calling to the female using his vibrating panels, called tymbals, on his sides. When the female, who cannot buzz, hears the buzz of a male, she searches for him. After they mate, the female will use her ovipositor to cut a line into the branch of a tree and lay her eggs there. Adult cicadas don't usually bite. They are usually green or black. Cicadas can also be eaten. It is eaten in countries like China.

Cicadas live in temperate to tropical climates where their large size and unique sound makes them well known. Cicadas are often colloquially called locusts,[1] although they are unrelated to true locusts, which are a kind of grasshopper. Cicadas are related to leafhoppers and spittlebugs.

  1. Milne, Lorus; Milne, Margery (1992). The Audubon Society field guide to North American insects and spiders. New York: Alfred A Knopf. ISBN 0-394-50763-0.

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