Discovery’s live cicada cam puts you in the heart of Brood X country

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Yesterday, a CNET co-worker in Louisville, Kentucky, described  buzzing outside her window. The most insect action I usually get here in San Francisco, on the other hand, is the bee or two I spot outside my home office window. Yeah, 인방티비 I’m feeling pretty left out as on the Eastern US for the first time since 2004. 

Thankfully, Discovery has launched a 24-hour live cicada cam to ease the cicada-FOMO of those of us but not situated in Brood X country.  

The cam, available on , , and the , is broadcasting from Alexandria, Virginia. Yesterday, it was trained on a tree full of nymphal exoskeletons left behind by the insects after they climb up from underground, inflate their wings and start getting busy making babies. (“C’mon, somebody shake a leaf,” one bored YouTube commenter wrote.) The action isn’t much more exciting today, but it picks up at night, with night vision cameras there to catch it.  

In the meantime, the bugs’ loud mating calls — occasionally punctuated by a bird calling or a — make for mesmerizing white noise. 

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In case you haven’t been keeping up with cicadapalooza 2021, periodical cicadas spend almost their whole lives beneath the ground, living on sap from tree roots. Then, in the spring of their 13th or 17th year, depending on the type, they tunnel out, synchronously and in huge numbers, for a brief (and extremely loud) adult mating frenzy.  It’s thought that so many periodical cicadas emerge at once so enough can evade predators and live on to mate and start the cycle all over again. 

Brood X, also called the Great Eastern Brood, is one of the biggest broods of 17-year cicadas, and this year it’s showing up en masse in 15 states, plus Washington, DC. The last time Brood X emerged, George W. Bush was president, the final episode of Friends had just aired, and Mark Zuckerberg had launched Thefacebook, Facebook’s precursor, only months before. 

Discovery’s cicada livestream will be active until Sunday, May 30 at 8 p.m. PT. After that, it’s back to Netflix for most of us. Except if you’re , who’s about to head straight into the insect scrum with a couple of entomologists for some serious cicada close-ups. Stay tuned. 

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