Where billions of cicadas are about to emerge, in one map

A Brood XIV periodical cicada during the last emergence in 2008, in Robeson Township, Pennsylvania. | Bill Uhrich/MediaNews Group via Getty Images

Oh, to be a cicada. 

For the last 17 years, a group of cicadas known as Brood XIV has been buried several inches underground, doing very little. This particular batch of insects has missed a global pandemic, Donald Trump winning two presidential elections, Brexit, multiple wars, and more. 

Now they’re about to emerge. 

By the billions.

Across large portions of the eastern US, from Long Island to central Tennessee. 

Around May and June, the noisy insects will erupt from the ground and live only for a few weeks — just long enough to find mates and lay eggs — before dying. Once their offspring hatch, the young will bury themselves underground, remaining largely oblivious to the world for another 17 years.

The map above, which shows Brood XIV in neon green, provides only a rough approximation of where different broods will appear. For a more granular map, check out this one the University of Connecticut provided. This year’s brood is similarly shown in neon green on that map.

Eastern North America is the only place in the world where you find periodical cicadas — groups of cicadas that emerge from the ground every 13 or 17 years, depending on the brood, or group. Slightly different kinds of cicadas, known as annual cicadas, appear every summer and have a global distribution. (How do cicadas count years? Likely using the flow of tree sap, as I explain here.)

Read more:

8 surprising reasons to stop hating cicadas and start worshipping them

A rare burst of billions of cicadas will rewire our ecosystems for years to come

Watch Sir David Attenborough seduce a cicada with the snap of his fingers

Brood XIV is the second largest brood of cyclical cicadas and surfaces every 17 years.

While brief, the coming insect explosion will shape ecosystems for years to come. These pulses of bugs provide food for pretty much everything in the forest and have been shown to increase bird populations and shift the hunting patterns of other species. As one study put it, pulses of periodical cicadas can “rewire” entire forest food webs.

If you come across what you think is a Brood XIV periodical cicada, report it! You can download an app called Cicada Safari to submit your photos. It’ll help the researchers who study them. 

Related articles

Abuse of Power

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8kF6hasvvx4 What ICE is doing isn’t public safety....

January layoffs highest since Great Recession: analyst



Layoffs hit their highest total last month since the Great Recession nearly two decades ago, according to a new analysis, and employers don't look to be adding jobs soon.

U.S. employers announced 108,435 layoffs for January, up 118 percent from the same period a year ago and 205 percent from December, according to outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas, and CNBC reported those were the highest totals for January since the depths of the global financial crisis in 2009.

“Generally, we see a high number of job cuts in the first quarter, but this is a high total for January,” said Andy Challenger, chief revenue officer for the firm. “It means most of these plans were set at the end of 2025, signaling employers are less-than-optimistic about the outlook for 2026.”

Companies announced only 5,306 new hires, also the lowest January since 2009, and the Challenger data calls into question a narrative that has formed around a no-hire, no-fire labor market.

"Some high-profile layoff announcements have boosted fears of wider damage in the labor market," CNBC reported. "Amazon, UPS and Dow Inc. recently have announced sizable job cuts. Indeed, transportation had the highest level from a sector standpoint in January, due largely to plans from UPS to cut more than 30,000 workers. Technology was second on the back of Amazon’s announcement to shed 16,000 mostly corporate level jobs."

Planned hiring dropped 13 percent since January 2025 and fell off 49 percent since December, and initial jobless claims spiked since early December to a seasonally adjusted total of 231,000 for the last week of January.

"Sobering data from Challenger on the US labor market," said Wharton School professor Mohamed A. El-Erian. "Announced job cuts in January more than doubled year-over-year, hitting their highest level since the 2009 Great Recession. Most notably, these layoffs are occurring while GDP continues to grow at approximately 4 percent, accelerating the decoupling of employment from economic growth — a phenomenon that, if it persists, has profound economic, political, and social implications."


The Fight Is Upon Us: What The Right to Vote Looks Like on Trump’s Terrain of Violence

Both the calendar and the events in Minneapolis have brought the midterm elections suddenly into focus. We had a special...