Birds May Hold Clues to the ’Bizarre’ Life Cycle of Brood X Cicadas

Billions of cicadas will emerge in the eastern United States this spring, presenting a once-in-a-17-year opportunity for scientists to understand how they shape populations of birds and other species.
Periodical cicadas from Brood X during their last emergence in 2004. Michael Ventura/Alamy

Since 2004, billions of clear-winged insects have been growingjust beneath the surface of the eastern United States.Overthe past year, their eyesturnedred, one last change before the bugs are ready for their debut. Finally, this spring, on a warm night in May when the soil reaches 64 degrees, thebugs will use thick forelegs to dig a tunnel to the surface. They’ll wait until the timing is just right.In the middle of the night, each nymph will emerge from its hole and climb a nearby tree, hang upside down, and perform a sit-up. The force will split its exoskeletondown itsback,wide enough to release a broad insect with a soft, white body. Through the night, crumpled wings will expand and straighten. Their ghostly exteriors will darken to black with orange spots.

People will awaken that next day to meet Brood X. Withthe noise of their courting calls, they'll be hard to ignore.

Cicadas crawl about forests all over the world, and mosthave annual life cycles.But periodical cicadas, which don’t existon Earth but the eastern United States, spend far more time underground before emerging in broods to mate either every 13 years or every 17 years.A different cicada broodemerges most years, but these groupsvary greatly in size and location. This year will be special: The so-called Brood X is among the largest anddensest. The insects will appear by the billionsin that cross parts of Pennsylvania, Delaware, Washington, D.C., Illinois, Ohio, Indiana,Georgia, and Tennessee. “There’s no end to how bizarre and interesting these cicadasare,” says Walt Koenig, a research zoologist emeritus at the University of California, Berkeley, who, even in retirement, is still working to unravel their mysteries.

Scientists are still not certain why these insects evolved these unusually long, coordinated life cycles.One relativelystraightforward explanation is the idea ofsafety in numbers, saysUniversity of California-Davis entomologist Richard Karban. Birds usually help keep bug populations in check, and thecicada influx willbe a bonanza fora number ofmedium- or larger-sized birdsthat are big enough to dine on the two-inch insects.But because millions of cicadas emerge on a single acre of forest during big brood years, even the keenest birdshardly put a dent in the population. “The vast majority escape getting eaten and live to lay the next brood,” says Karban.

But some scientists believe the story of how birds and these insects interact may be more nuanced orcomplicated than that.

In Costa Rican rainforests, researchers understand that tropical birds usually where cicada noise is the loudest, whichcan drown out their own calls. , Koenig and a colleague at the U.S. Forest Service thought this might also be the case with the eastern United States' periodical cicadas. Field researchers had noticed that certain bird populations appeared to be lower in the years that periodical cicada broods emerged in their territories. Maybe the cicadas were the cause, but it wasalso possible the birds were being undercounted because scientists couldn’t hear them as easily on theirsurveys, which often rely on identifying birds through their sounds.So the pair went to test this. To do so, they compiled 37 years of data from the , focusing on 24 insect-eating species that live in the periodical cicada range.

It wasn’t a sonic illusion—the numbers of 15 species appeared to ebb and flow in step with periodical cicada broods in their territory. Red-headed Woodpecker, American Crow, Tufted Titmouse, Gray Catbird, and Brown Thrasher populations weresmallerin cicada years compared to years without cicadas. Their numbers also appeared to spike the following year and then stabilize. The study also showed that the number of Red-bellied Woodpeckers, Blue Jays, Common Grackles, and Brown-headed Cowbirds in an area increased sharply one to three years following a feast of cicadas, then declined after that, suggesting that populations swelled to meet the abundance of food,and then dwindled when not as many of their species survived during cicada off years.

Some researchers, Koenig says, took these findings to mean that cicada broods may time their entrance with years when bird populations would be at their lowest. Others believed that the data hinted that periodical cicadas were engineering those populations themselves.“Even I think that’s a crazy hypothesis, but it’s not any crazier than what anyone else has at this point, and there is at least some data to back it up,” Koenig says.

All of this makes this year's Brood X emergence a scientific opportunity. For example,Zoe Getman-Pickering, a postdoctoral research entomologist at George Washington University,is among a new generation of scientists who will experience the phenomenon of Brood X for the first time this year. She’s part of a group of researchers who hope to better understand the ripple-down effects that occur when crows, robins, and other medium-sized birds temporarily switch from eating caterpillars and other insectsto cicada meat. She expects the diet shift will have a broader effect on forest ecosystems, including on smaller birds.

“We want to know: Will smaller birds eat enough caterpillars to keep these populations in balance? Or will the caterpillar populations get out of control and wreak havoc on the forest if medium-sized birds aren’t eating them?” she says. “Birds play a really important role. How many birds there are, and what they’re eating, affects the entire ecosystem.”