For decades, Melven Jones couldn’t talk about what happened to him as a child. He didn’t even remember it.
U.S. FDA says to avoid eating cicadas 'if you're allergic to seafood'
Cicadas might seem like a crispy, protein-packed snack, but people with seafood allergies should think twice about eating them, according to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
"We have to say it," the FDA Wednesday. "Don't eat #cicadas if you're allergic to seafood as these insects share a family relation to shrimp and lobsters."
The loud, cacophonous bugs first emerged in May on the East Coast as part of "Brood X," which comes out every 17 years, according to the . The agency says the brood is centered around Pennsylvania, northern Virginia, Indiana and eastern Tennessee.
To some, the brood's emergence is an awe-inspiring experience, worthy of and endless . To others, cicadas can be a creepy, inescapable nuisance (one recently CNN's chief congressional correspondent, Manu Raju, during preparations for a live shot).
The brittle insects might be annoying, but according to the Environmental Protection Agency, cicadas aren't harmful to humans, pets or gardens. If cats or dogs eat them, though, "this may temporarily cause an upset stomach or vomiting, but there is no need to worry if a pet eats a small number of cicadas," the .
"Cicadas don't sting or bite. Cicadas are not toxic," the FDA's Center for Veterinary Medicine late last month. Still, their "crunchy/crispy exoskeleton can irritate the stomach lining if eaten in large volumes and can be a potential choking hazard, especially for small dogs."
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Local Spotlight
A tale about a taxicab hauling gold and sinking through the ice on Larder Lake, Ont., in December 1937 has captivated a man from that town for decades.
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