Neotibicen tibicen
Common name:
Swamp cicada
Genus:
Neotibicen
Family:
Cicadidae
Suborder:
Auchenorrhyncha
Neotibicen tibicen
Common name:
Swamp cicada
Genus:
Neotibicen
Family:
Cicadidae
Suborder:
Auchenorrhyncha
Neotibicen tibicen
Common name:
Swamp cicada
Genus:
Neotibicen
Family:
Cicadidae
Suborder:
Auchenorrhyncha
Genus (Plantae): Neotibicen
Cicadas of the genus Neotibicen are large-bodied insects of the family Cicadidae that appear in summer or early fall in eastern North America. Common names include cicada, harvestfly, jar fly, and the misnomer locust. Until recently, these species were all in the genus Tibicen, which was redefined in the twenty-first century to include only a few European species, while species from the Western United States and Mexico are now placed in a separate genus, Hadoa. In addition, several former Neotibicen species have been moved to the genus Megatibicen.M.p>
Neotibicen species are the most commonly encountered cicadas in the eastern United States. Unlike periodical cicadas, whose appearances aboveground occur at 13- or 17-year intervals, Neotibicen species can be seen every year, hence their nickname "annual cicadas". Despite their annual appearances, Neotibicen probably take multiple years to develop underground, because all cicada species for which life cycle lengths have been measured do so, except when growing as agricultural pests. Their annual reappearance is presumably due to overlapping generations.
Neotibicen cicadas are 1–2 inches (25–51 mm) long, with characteristic green, brown, and black markings on the top of the thorax, and tented, membranous wings extending past the abdomen. The fore wings are about twice the length of the hindwings. Adults feed using their beak to tap into the xylem of plants; nymphs feed from the xylem of roots.
Reference: Wikipedia