Wednesday, December 21, 2011
Won't See This Again 'til 2024
Saw several of these strange burrows ringed with cairns of mud balls, a good three inches high, this past summer. They are called "chimneys." Like nothing I'd seen before, but remarkable, very noticeable, and today I find out it's no wonder I hadn't seen them before or since, because they are the homes of the nymphs of the 13-year cicada, whose year it was in 2011. (In late May and June you couldn't take a step outdoors here without feeling them crunch beneath your feet.) Some people confuse these mounds with crayfish "chimneys," but these were located on a hill, under trees, far from any creek beds. When it rains, the cicada nymphs house-clean by pushing mud and mud balls up and out of their dwelling -- pretty good considering they haven't any arms -- and leave them right outside. Good housekeeping. Now I will know what these little mounds of mud balls are when I see them again in 2024.
Labels:
13-year cicada,
animal hole,
animal home,
burrow,
chimney mound,
cicada,
cicada burrow,
cicada nymph,
eastern Missouri,
entomology,
insects,
mud,
mud hole,
mudballs,
nature photo,
ozark foothills,
woods
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