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Mississippi sees first documented cicada of 2024

By Kristopher White Apr 26, 2024 | 10:57 AM

CHOCTAW COUNTY, Miss. (WJTV) – Cicadas are now emerging in Mississippi!

According to the Mississippi State University (MSU) Extension Service, Choctaw County saw its first documented cicada for 2024 this week.

In the South, Mississippi has three broods of 13-year cicadas, each of which occurs in its own geographic area and emerges on its own schedule. This spring, thirteen-year cicada Brood XIX, also known as the Great Southern brood, will emerge in parts of 15 states, including at least 17 counties in Mississippi.

According to the MSU Extension Service, Mississippi is the only state that has all three broods of 13-year periodic cicadas. By tradition, periodic cicada broods are numbered using Roman numerals. Brood XIX will emerge this year, Brood XXII will emerge next in 2027, and Brood XXIII in 2028.

There are 12 broods of 17-year cicadas, but these occur farther north. Seventeen-year cicada Brood XIII will also emerge this year, in northern Illinois and a few surrounding states, but not in Mississippi.

Officials said periodic cicadas are attention-getting insects, not only because of their appearance, black and orange with red eyes, and their loud singing, but also because of their numbers. Suitable habitats, such as upland hardwoods, can have hundreds of thousands of cicadas per acre, with the male half of the population singing loudly in the trees to attract females.

Mississippi also has annual cicadas. These are winged and have greenish bodies and prominent, bulging eyes.