Part 2 of my Cicada season study of the 2018 / 2019 Cicada broods in my neighbourhood. It was a very big Cicada year with a nice variety of Cicada's to be found. Part 1 looks at the start of the Cicada season in November, part 2 explores January and December. This is the Australian Cicada season and the Cicada's life cycle tends to be 7 years. There are lots of mysteries related to Cicada's, they seem not to have a job in nature and understand prime numbers. We only really see them in their final weeks of life as they emerge as adult's to breed and lay eggs on trees. It's the transformation from nymph to adult that is one of the most dangerous moments in a Cicada's very long life.
The cicadas are a superfamily, the Cicadoidea, of insects in the order Hemiptera (true bugs). They are in the suborder Auchenorrhyncha, along with smaller jumping bugs such as leafhoppers and froghoppers. The superfamily is divided into two families, Tettigarctidae, with two species in Australia, and Cicadidae, with more than 3,000 species described from around the world; many species remain undescribed. Cicadas have prominent eyes set wide apart, short antennae, and membranous front wings. They have an exceptionally loud song, produced in most species by the rapid buckling and unbuckling of drumlike tymbals. The earliest known fossil Cicadomorpha appeared in the Upper Permian period; extant species occur all around the world in temperate to tropical climates. They typically live in trees, feeding on watery sap from xylem tissue and laying their eggs in a slit in the bark. Most cicadas are cryptic. The vast majority of species are active during the day as adults, with some calling at dawn or dusk and only a rare few species are known to be nocturnal. The periodic cicadas spend most of their lives as underground nymphs, emerging only after 13 or 17 years, which may reduce losses by starving their predators and eventually emerging in huge numbers that overwhelm and satiate any remaining predators. The annual cicadas are species that emerge every year. Though these cicadas have lifecycles that can vary from one to nine or more years as underground larvae, their emergence above ground as adults is not synchronized, so some appear every year. The Australian cicada spends seven years in nymph form drinking sap from plant roots underground before emerging from the earth as an adult. The adults, who live for six weeks, fly around, mate, and breed over the summer.
Video posted as educational, documentary, and scientific and forms part of my Insect / spider study series of videos.
Leokimvideo is the home of the 'Big Spider Loves Daddy' videos on YouTube! You must have written permission from me to use any part of this video. For some reason these styles of videos are ripped off, re-edited. Considering how YouTube has collapsed I will actively chase down producers stealing parts of this video, that's the rules.
Web Links :
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cicada
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cycloch...
https://australianmuseum.net.au/learn...
https://www.abc.net.au/science/articl...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green-h...
Cicada Life & Death 2 Whole Cicada Season Part 2 EDUCATIONAL VIDEO ─ leokimvideo
<style>.embed-container { position: relative; padding-bottom: 56.25%; height: 0; overflow: hidden; max-width: 100%; } .embed-container iframe, .embed-container object, .embed-container embed { position: absolute; top: 0; left: 0; width: 100%; height: 100%; }</style><div class="embed-container"><iframe src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/XktO5RRdgrM" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe></div>