What are Brood X cicadas?

The periodical cicada sensation that’s sweeping the nation.

Periodical Cicada, Adult, Magicicada spp. Requires 17 years to complete development. Nymph splits its skin, and transforms into an adult. Feeds on sap of tree roots. Northern Illinois Brood. This brood is the largest emergence of cicadas anywhere.
The cicadas of Brood X, like other periodical cicadas, are black with red or orange eyes, legs and wing veins.
(Image credit: Ed Reschke/Getty)

Every 17 years, the billions of periodical cicadas that make up Brood X turn their attention from tree roots to the sky. In the spring of 2021, after nearly two decades of development underground, the insects are ready to dig their way out of the earth across the eastern United States. 

Once exposed to open air, the cicada nymphs will shed their exoskeletons and climb up the nearest trees. There, the males will spend the next few weeks looking for love by shrieking at the top of their tymbals — the white, drum-like organs on each side of their bodies. In a tree full of male cicadas, tymbals can amplify the amorous insects' mating calls until they're loud enough to drown out a lawn mower.

Vicky Stein
Live Science Contributor

Vicky Stein is a science writer based in California. She has a bachelor's degree in ecology and evolutionary biology from Dartmouth College and a graduate certificate in science writing from the University of California, Santa Cruz (2018). Afterwards, she worked as a news assistant for PBS NewsHour, and now works as a freelancer covering anything from asteroids to zebras. Follow her most recent work (and most recent pictures of nudibranchs) on Twitter.