From LevelGreen Landscaping:
https://www.levelgreenlandscaping.com/blog/can-cicadas-cause-damage-plants

Can Cicadas Cause Damage to Plants?The Georgia Brood XIX is expected to emerge in mid-May and will last through late June. Despite the stupendous numbers, we don’t need to lose much sleep over cicadas, says James Kole, branch manager at Level Green Landscaping. (Unless you’re plagued by nightmares of them dropping from trees into your hair.)

The Georgia brook Brood XIX, is expected to emerge in mid-May and will last through late June. 

“Most of your plants won’t be harmed,” Kole says. “Your flowers will be fine, your shrubs will be OK, your older mature trees will be fine.”

But if you have tender young trees on your property that were planted in the last year or two, they need protecting, he says.

“The female cicadas lay eggs in smaller branches — branches the size of your pinky or smaller,” he says.

Female cicadas use an appendage called an ovipositor to slice slits into twigs, where they deposit their eggs.

“That kills the branch,” Kole says. “So young trees that are made up only of those smaller branches are in jeopardy.”How to Protect Trees from CicadasInsect netting to the rescue.

“You’ll need to put netting over those trees before the cicadas emerge and leave it on for about a month,” Kole says. “It has to be insect netting with openings smaller than a centimeter.”

Use twine and zip ties to cinch down the netting where the tree branches meet the trunk and create a tight seal beneath the canopy.

The goal is to get trees covered by mid-April.

“They’ll be emerging once the soil reaches 64 degrees,” he says. “That should be mid to late April.”Can Cicadas Cause Damage to Shrubs?Some shrubs have thin, tender twigs, too — are they in danger?

Not to worry, Kole says.

“Cicadas like to be higher, in the trees,” he says. “Also, shrubs regenerate growth faster than trees do, so if they’re damaged they can bounce back faster.”Can Cicadas Cause Damage to Plants?If these cicadas have been underground for 17 years, they must be hungry, right?

Won’t they devour tender flowers and plants? Or will they just order thousands of pizzas?

“They’re not interested in eating vegetation,” Kole says. “They’ve been eating tree roots for the last 17 years. They’re not coming out to eat. They’re coming out to mate, lay eggs, and die.”

Bottom line: don’t freak out.

“They’re not harmful,” Kole says. “They don’t bite. They don’t sting. They just flop around in the air.”

Still, that’s a lot of flopping.

“We’re expecting 1.5 million per acre in this area,” Kole says. “I don’t know what to do with that number. It sounds like a biblical plague.

“I’m kind of mad they’re coming out at the nicest time of the year,” he says. “Just when we want to open the windows to sleep at night.”

Better grab some ear plugs.

“Their decibel level is over 100, which is louder than a backpack blower,” he says. “They sing at night, so we’ll have to sleep with the windows closed.”

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *