Neotibicen canicularis is one of the smaller Neotibicen. It’s better known as a Dog Day Cicada.
These photos come from a cicada hunt for auletes, but I found this canicularis as well.


Neotibicen canicularis is one of the smaller Neotibicen. It’s better known as a Dog Day Cicada.
These photos come from a cicada hunt for auletes, but I found this canicularis as well.


Each year I go to Manchester, NJ to look for Megatibicen auletes aka Northern Dusk-Singing Cicadas. There are auletes in my zipcode, but they’re easier to find in the southern-half of New Jersey. The location is a favorite of Elias Bonaros’, and more times than not we sync-up and go auletes hunting as a team. Good times.
Two auletes are better than one:

M. auletes nymph:

M. auletes exit hole:

Megatibicen auletes in Manchester NJ:

Megatibicen auletes exuvia in Manchester NJ:

Megatibicen auletes climbing tree:

* Note as of 2023 the name of this cicada has changed to Megatibicen grossus. You can also call it a Northern Dusk-Signing Cicada.
Photos of Brood V Magicicada in West Virginia by Matt Berger (Instagram), including many examples of Magicicadas with a variety of eye colors (the typical color is red).
Brood V emerged in West Virginia (and Ohio, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia and Long Island, NY) in 2016. It will next emerge in 2033.
These photos are BIG. Click/tap the thumbnail for larger versions.
Molting Cicada by Matt Berger:

Molting Cicada by Matt Berger:

Molting Cicada by Matt Berger:

Molting Cicada by Matt Berger:

Molting Cicada by Matt Berger:

Gray Eyed Cicada by Matt Berger:

Gray Eyed Cicada by Matt Berger:

Cicada that sclerotized before it got out of its skin:

Cicada Fungus Infection by Matt Berger:

Matt has contributed photos to cicadamania.com for many years. In 2016 he was a post-grad student at West Virginia University. The lab he was part of produced this paper:
Discovery of psychoactive plant and mushroom alkaloids in ancient fungal cicada pathogens
Greg R. Boyce, Emile Gluck-Thaler, Jason C. Slot, Jason E. Stajich, William J. Davis, Tim Y. James, John R. Cooley, Daniel G. Panaccione, Jorgen Eilenberg, Henrik H. De Fine Licht, Angie M. Macias, Matthew C. Berger, Kristen L. Wickert, Cameron M. Stauder, Ellie J. Spahr, Matthew D. Maust, Amy M. Metheny, Chris Simon, Gene Kritsky, Kathie T. Hodge, Richard A. Humber, Terry Gullion, Dylan P. G. Short, Teiya Kijimoto, Dan Mozgai, Nidia Arguedas, Matt T. Kasson
bioRxiv 375105; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/375105
Photos of Brood XXII in Ohio and Kentucky by Roy Troutman.
Brood XXII is a brood of 13-year Magicicada. It emerges in a small area of Ohio & Kentucky, as well as Louisiana and Mississippi. It last emerged in 2014, and will emerge again in 2027.
Roy traveled around Ohio and Kentucky mapping locations were Magicicada were present. The result is the paper:
Kritsky, Gene & Troutman, Roy. (2014). The 2014 emergence of a previously unrecognized 13-year brood of periodical cicadas in southwestern Ohio and northern Kentucky.
The photos are BIG. Click/tap the thumbnails below for larger versions.
13 Year Cicada molting by Roy Troutman taken in Chilo, Ohio in 2014:

2014 Ohio Magicicada tredecassini adult on leaf by Roy Troutman:

2014 Ohio Two Magicicada tredecassini Ecdysis by Roy Troutman:

2014 Ohio periodical cicadas on a trash bin by Roy Troutman:

2014 Ohio Magicicada tredecassini Teneral by Roy Troutman:

2014 Ohio Magicicada tredecassini nymph on tree by Roy Troutman:

2014 Ohio Magicicada tredecassini Nymph by Roy Troutman:

2014 Ohio Magicicada tredecassini leaning back by Roy Troutman:

2014 Ohio Magicicada tredecassini cicada ecdysis by Roy Troutman:

2014 Ohio Magicicada tredecassini adult on leaf by Roy Troutman:

Piles of Magicicada skins and dead cicadas on the ground around the tree:

2014 Ohio adult Magicicada tredecassini by Roy Troutman:

13 Year Nymphs by Roy Troutman taken in Chilo Ohio in 2014:

13 Year Nymph by Roy Troutman taken in Chilo, Ohio in 2014:

13 Year Nymph by Roy Troutman taken in Chilo, Ohio in 2014:

13 Year Nymph by Roy Troutman taken in Chilo, Ohio in 2014 on tree:

Brood XXIII Magicicada photos from 2015 by me (Dan Mozgai).
In 2015 I took an 8 state road trip to see as much of the brood as possible.
Skip to Part 1.
Cicada holes in Mississippi

Cicada skins on Touch of Nature sign in Illinois:

Cicada exuvia at Indiana rest stop:

Teneral Magicicada:

Male Magicicada tredecim:

Male Female and Male Magicicada tredecim:

Teneral female Magiciada tredecim in Kentucky:

Magicicada exuvia in Mississippi:

Brood XXIII Magicicada photos from 2015 by me (Dan Mozgai).
In 2015 I took an 8 state road trip to see as much of the brood as possible.
Skip to Part 2.
Male Magicicada tredecim in Mississippi:

Maybe a Magicicada neotredecim in Illinois:

Cicada exuvia in Giant City in Illinois:

Cicada chimneys found by Sam Orr in Illinois:

Magicicada in Kentucky:

Hieroglyphic cicada illustration in Jackson Museum:

Teneral female Magicicada tredecim:

Cicada exuvia on Touch of Nature sign in Illinois:

This is a series of Magicicada photos from the 2018 Brood VII (Onondaga Brood) from Onondaga county New York. Read more about Brood VII.
These photos are BIG. Click/tab to see larger versions.
These are photos of a Brood V Magicicada straggler from 2015 taken in West Virginia taken by Matt Berger (Instagram). This Magicicada septendecim emerged one year early.
The original photos are BIG; click/tap the images to see the large versions.
Brood XIV (14) Magicicada emerged in the greater Cincinnati area in 2008. Roy Troutman took many photos, and I’ll feature them in a series of galleries.
Skip to Part 1, Part 2 or Part 3.
These images are BIG so click the thumbnail to see the full-size image.
Samuel Orr filing in Roy’s parent’s backyard:

Gene Kritsky putting thermometer in the ground:

Gene Kritsky making a hole for a cicada thermometer:

Magicicada with blue and red eyes. Photo by Roy Troutman. Brood XIV:

Magicicada with blue and red eyes. Photo by Roy Troutman. Brood XIV:

Magicicada with blue and red eyes. Photo by Roy Troutman. Brood XIV:

Brood XIV (14) Magicicada emerged in the greater Cincinnati area in 2008. Roy Troutman took many photos, and I’ll feature them in a series of galleries.
Skip to Part 1, Part 2 or Part 4.
Molting Magicicada:

Magicicada nymph:

Filming Magicicada:

Magicicada with unusual eye colors:

Filming Magicicada:

Magicicada with unusual eye colors:

Gene Kritsky:

Gene’s Cicada Thermometer:

Molting Magicicada:

Adult Magicicada:
