Dear EarthTalk: Are the cicada blooms of the Eastern U.S. out of whack due to global warming and/or other man-made environmental problems? — Joe R., Moorestown, New Jersey

The short answer is … probably. If you live in the eastern or midwestern U.S., you’ve likely seen so-called periodic cicadas. These inch-long, gray- and orange-winged insects with bulging red eyes feed on the underground xylem tissue of tree roots for years before emerging in millions-strong-per-acre swarms to mate and then die.

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