![]() ![]() The Greengrocer or Masked Devil ( Cyclochila australasiae) is the most common cicada in Sydney and Melbourne. The Cherrynose, also known as the Whisky Drinker. As the name suggests, the Cherrynose – also known as the Whisky Drinker – has a red “nose”. The Floury Baker looks as if it is covered in white dust. Scientists who study them clearly care deeply about these creatures, and have given them some truly fantastic names: Blue Moon, Black Prince, Yellow Monday. Today’s cicadas come in all shapes, colours and sizes, ranging in length from about 10 millimetres to 12 centimetres – and each has its own distinct song. But what causes the major plagues we see some years, and virtually none next year?” “We don’t really know what the triggers are for them to emerge, except for rain. “We don’t know a hell of a lot about them – there are only a limited number of cicada scientists about,” he says. ![]() There are about 3000 described species and perhaps 1000, named and unnamed, roosting across Australia – no one really knows the true number.Īustralia has by far the highest diversity of cicadas of anywhere in the world (South-East Asia and the Americas are next), probably because the creatures have been here for so long – at least since the last Ice Age, says Emery, a professor of veterinary parasitology at the University of Sydney. Fossilised versions date to more than 200 million years. Credit: Nathan EmeryĬicadas are a wonderfully diverse and ancient insect. What are cicadas, and why do they make such a racket? Why does it happen at dusk? And why only in summer?Ī Greengrocer cicada emerges from its shell. The song we hear at the height of summer is the cacophony of carnal festivities as the creatures go out with a bang. While they may evoke sweet associations for us, a cicada’s life is, in fact, one of solitary, years-long darkness punctuated by a sudden festival of sex. I used to catch them and bring the shells home and put them on the Christmas tree.” ![]() “It is just a normal part of the summer celebration, the soundtrack of summer,” says one of Australia’s few cicada experts, Professor David Emery. and then, towards the end of summer, the sound ends abruptly and the only evidence of it you can ever find is strange, brown shells that crumple to the touch. Some love the song, others hate it, but for many people, especially those with large backyards, it is ever-present during the warmer months, a sound that seems to come from an insect you can never find, no matter how much hunting you do. It is the background sound to sausages being turned on the barbecue, to kids splashing in the pool, to the crack and fizz of opening that first beer – the dull, drone song of the cicada. Normal text size Larger text size Very large text size ![]()
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