Why Katydids Are Swarming Texas This Summer (2024)

Katydids prefer to be heard rather than seen. The insect’s name, an onomatopoeic transcription of the male mating call, first appeared in print in 1784, in Scottish American physician J.F.D. Smyth’s travelogue A Tour in the United States of America. “Their noise is loud and incessant,” Smyth wrote, “one perpetually and regularly answering the other in notes exactly similar to the words Katy did, or Katy Katy did, repeated by one, and another immediately bawls out Katy didn’t, or Katy Katy didn’t.”

Scientists have now identified more than eight thousand species of katydids around the world, including around seventy in Texas. But the variety keeping you awake this summer is most likely the Central Texas leaf katydid, a.k.a. the truncated true katydid (Paracyrtophyllus robustus). Although most common in the Hill Country, the species is found across much of Texas. Around 1.5 inches long, with three pairs of legs and threadlike antennae protruding from between their beady eyes, leaf katydids dwell high in oak trees. They especially like post oaks. Camouflaged as leaves to evade predators such as birds and bats, the insects are nocturnal and herbivorous. Males rub their forewings together to produce their distinctive, high-pitched chirp.“It’s a pretty charismatic species,” said Texas A&M University entomologist Hojun Song. “It just screams ‘classic katydid.’ ”

If you’ve noticed the raspy chirping more than usual this summer, that’s because the state is currently experiencing a so-called population outbreak of leaf katydids. “You usually can’t find them, because they’re on top of trees,” Song told me. “But during an outbreak you can go out and collect hundreds of them.” Last month, a Reddit user from north-central Texas posted a video showing dozens of leaf katydids swarming the top of his car. A Hill Country resident responded, “I see a bunch of these... on my land.” Another commenter described a katydid hitching a ride into his house inside a grocery bag.

Listen to the chirp of the Central Texas leaf katydid:

Climate change has created the perfect conditions for a katydid bonanza. “We warmed up earlier in the year than normal,” explained entomologist Lauren Davidson, director of the Houston Museum of Natural Science’s co*ckrell Butterfly Center. “It’s been very wet and rainy. All of those things come together to create the perfect habitat.”

While they’re often mistaken for crickets or cicadas, leaf katydids have longer antennae, sing only at night, and live in trees. The insects are usually green, but during population outbreaks, they tend to be brownish-red—a mystery that science has not yet unraveled. (Bubble gum–pink katydids have also been spotted in North America; the Audubon Nature Institute, in New Orleans, maintains a menagerie of around 75.) In especially severe outbreaks, katydids engage in locustlike behavior, stripping every leaf from a tree before moving on. During a 2001 outbreak in Lee County, east of Austin, an entomologist observed “several areas of almost totally defoliated post oak trees.” Not to worry, though. Unlike locusts, katydids rarely inflict lasting damage. Texas experienced subsequent katydid outbreaks in 2007, 2010, 2012, 2016, and 2018.

What we call the katydid was first described by eighteenth-century Swedish biologist Carl Linnaeus. Most insects in the order Orthoptera, to which katydids belong, are characterized by jackhammerlike hind legs adapted for jumping, plus two pairs of wings. Katydids usually can’t fly, but their wings allow them to glide or hop over short distances.

In males, the forewings serve mainly as a noisemaker. To attract a mate, a male rubs a rigid scraper embedded in the right wing against a comblike file on the left wing. Scientists call this stridulation. The conical shape of the wings amplifies the sound like a vuvuzela. It works like a charm: the leaf katydid is one of the loudest creatures in North America, capable of producing a chain saw–like 110 decibels. Females choose partners based on their calls—a louder chirp indicates a healthier male. Each katydid species makes a slightly different noise. Whether the local ones sound anything like “Katy did” is open to debate. Personally, I don’t hear it.

To mate, the male passes the female a sperm packet (or spermatophore), which includes a kind of protein snack pack (known as a spermatophylax) that the female eats to help develop her eggs.

Katydids typically live for about a year. They hatch in spring, mate in summer, and lay their eggs by fall, before dying off over the winter. So if you’re sick of the nightly racket produced by these tiny troublemakers, you only have to stick it out another few months. Until then, it’s Hot Katydid Summer.

  • More About:
  • Critters
Why Katydids Are Swarming Texas This Summer (2024)

FAQs

Why Katydids Are Swarming Texas This Summer? ›

Climate change has created the perfect conditions for a katydid bonanza. “We warmed up earlier in the year than normal,” explained entomologist Lauren Davidson, director of the Houston Museum of Natural Science's co*ckrell Butterfly Center. “It's been very wet and rainy.

How long is the katydid season in Texas? ›

Length 1.3 - 1.7 inches. Forewings are broad near the tips, leaf-like and are slightly convex thus forming a cup around the abdomen. Habitat: Oak woodlands. Season: Adults sing primarily late May to mid-July, but can be heard until September.

Are katydids native to Texas? ›

The northern true katydid, Pterophylla carnellifolia, is more commonly found in Texas and other southern and eastern states, but adults are green, rather than brown. Katydids are members of the order Orthoptera, which includes the grasshoppers, crickets and other species of katydids.

Are katydids seasonal? ›

In our area katydids overwinter as eggs. Females deposit eggs in soil, plant stems or tree bark in late summer or fall. The adults die off, and the following spring the eggs hatch into nymphs. These generally resemble the adults except they are smaller and lack fully developed wings and reproductive organs.

Are katydids a pest or beneficial? ›

At least 74 species of katydids (family Tettigoniidae) are present in California. Most are not pests because they chew only a small amount of foliage before moving to another plant. Forktailed bush katydid (Scudderia furcata) can be a pest because it chews young fruit in addition to leaves.

How to control katydids? ›

How to get rid of katydids
  1. Spinosad. Using spinosad, or a natural substance made by soil bacterium, on katydid nymphs (young) may help reduce the number of katydids around your property. ...
  2. Light traps. ...
  3. Insect-repelling plants. ...
  4. Remove compost and tall grass. ...
  5. Homemade spray.
Jun 22, 2020

What do katydids turn into? ›

Katydids have incomplete metamorphosis. The nymph that hatches from an egg looks a lot like an adult, except that it doesn't have wings. As they grow, katydids shed their exoskeletons (this is called molting). In their last molt, they get wings and they become adults.

Do katydids jump or fly? ›

As a group, katydids are poor flyers. Many species do not fly but only flutter their wings during leaps. Katydids hear by using a structure called a tympanum, or tympanic organ, one of which is located on each foreleg.

What is the difference between a true katydid and a false katydid? ›

True katydids have relatively shorter forewings, and, compared to those of the false katydids, the wings bulge out at the sides (Capinera et al. 2004). This species of katydid is typically green, but can be pink, orange, tan, brown, or yellow (Figure 1), though it is rare to find these in the wild.

What are katydids attracted to? ›

To feed or attract Katydids, you can plant Eucalyptus, Banksia or Acacia. Visit your local native plant nursery to find out what grows best in your area.

What time of day do katydids sing? ›

Late at night the last singers of the day take over and sing till the wee hours of the morning. Katydids are large green insects (2 -2 1/2 inches in length) that are more commonly heard than seen. Katydids resemble a leaf and easily hide within the upper crown of a hardwood tree.

What is the lifespan of a katydid? ›

The lifespan of a katydid is about a year. Females usually lay their eggs at the end of summer in plant stems. The eggs are typically oval and laid in rows on the plant. Most katydids overwinter in the egg form.

How long do katydids stay around? ›

The lifespan of a katydid is about a year. Females usually lay their eggs at the end of summer in plant stems. The eggs are typically oval and laid in rows on the plant. Most katydids overwinter in the egg form.

What time of year do katydids sing? ›

Katydids resemble a leaf and easily hide within the upper crown of a hardwood tree. They are named for the rhythmic song they sing in late summer. The males sing in quick bursts of two, three or four notes that sort of sound like Kay-tee-did.

How long do cicadas last in Texas? ›

The periodical cicada species that do occur in Texas complete their life cycles in 13 years, although some emerge almost every year. Adults emerge from April through July, depending upon species and locality.

What time of day are you most likely to hear katydids? ›

Katydids: Why they make this noise at night

The specific patterns and frequencies of their calls are species-specific, allowing individuals to identify and locate potential mates of the same species (and avoid mating with individuals of other species).

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Maia Crooks Jr

Last Updated:

Views: 5976

Rating: 4.2 / 5 (63 voted)

Reviews: 94% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Maia Crooks Jr

Birthday: 1997-09-21

Address: 93119 Joseph Street, Peggyfurt, NC 11582

Phone: +2983088926881

Job: Principal Design Liaison

Hobby: Web surfing, Skiing, role-playing games, Sketching, Polo, Sewing, Genealogy

Introduction: My name is Maia Crooks Jr, I am a homely, joyous, shiny, successful, hilarious, thoughtful, joyous person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.