Ismarv Organisation And Technology: The Byssus Of The Marine Mussel
The Periodical Cicada’s Timing
     CICADAS, insects resembling locusts, live on all continents except Antarctica.
Unique
 to the northeast of America, however, are the periodical cicadas, which
 have long  fascinated biologists. Consider: Millions of periodical 
cicadas appear suddenly in the spring for just a few weeks. During their
 short time in the sun, they shed their juvenile skin, sing
deafeningly, fly, reproduce, and then die.
     
 Strangely, the next generation appears either 13 or 17 years later, 
depending on the species.What happens to these insects in the meantime? 
To answer, we need to understand the
periodical cicada’s unique life cycle. About a week after appearing, adult insects mate
and
 the females lay from 400 to 600 eggs inside tree twigs. Soon 
thereafter, the adults die.Within the next few weeks, the eggs hatch and
 the young nymphs drop to the earth, burrow into the soil, and begin a 
life underground, where they suck fluids from the roots of shrubs or 
trees for
several years. Either 13 or 17 years later, the new adult generation emerges to repeat
the cycle.
          According to an article in Nature magazine, the complex life cycle of these cicadas
“has
 confounded scientists for centuries. . . . Even now, entomologists are 
trying to understand how the insects’ peculiar life cycles evolved.” It 
is an unprecedented mystery in the animal kingdom.
What do you think? Could the periodical cicada’s timing be the product of evolution?
Or was it designed?
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