SELECT LANGUAGE BELOW

Two rare blue-eyed cicadas were spotted in the Chicago suburbs

Two separate families living in suburban Chicago accidentally encountered a “one in a million” blue-eyed cicada and shared photos of the vibrant insect.

Greta Bailey told Fox News Digital that her 4-year-old son, Jack, was collecting the typically red-eyed cicadas when he first spotted the bright-eyed insects in the backyard of their Wheaton, Illinois, home.

Bailey said Fox 59 She didn’t even notice the blue-eyed cicada until it wandered into her backyard.

“I thought it was super cool and unique and I’d never even heard of blue-eyed cicadas existing,” Bailey said.

Billions of noisy cicadas awaken from slumber across the US

Greta Bailey’s 4-year-old son discovered the bright-eyed cicada in the backyard of their Wheaton, Illinois home. (Greta Bailey via Facebook)

Bailey said the family enjoyed photographing the cicadas before releasing them back into the wild.

Bailey’s photo showed the tiny creature, with striking blue eyes, being held by three children.

Two girls with blue-eyed cicadas

Greta Bailey’s daughters hold a blue-eyed cicada, which was later released by the family. (Greta Bailey via Facebook)

Another woman living in a Chicago suburb discovered a “one in a million” blue-eyed cicada while visiting a nature preserve.

Kelly Simkins, owner of Marlin’s Rocking Pet Show, shared the amazing discovery on Facebook, posting a photo of the cicada’s bright blue eyes.

The cicada invasion has begun! Find out where the flying insects are appearing

“A one in a million blue-eyed cicada was discovered at 7am today.” Simkins said in the post..

Blue-eyed cicada

Two species of blue-eyed cicadas were spotted in suburban Chicago this week. (Greta Bailey and Kelly Simpkins)

Family discovery is rare but not unheard of.

Click here to get the FOX News app

Gene Kritsky, author of “Periodic Cicadas: Plague and Mystery,” says blue eyes are the result of a genetic mutation.

Kritsky acknowledged that blue-eyed cicadas are indeed one in a million, but “of course, there are hundreds of millions of cicadas,” he added.

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Reddit
Telegram
WhatsApp

Related News