Current:Home > StocksMormon crickets plague parts of Nevada and Idaho: "It just makes your skin crawl" -Infinite Edge Learning
Mormon crickets plague parts of Nevada and Idaho: "It just makes your skin crawl"
View
Date:2025-04-18 04:46:54
Parts of Nevada and Idaho have been plagued with so-called Mormon crickets as the flightless, ground-dwelling insects migrate in massive bands. While Mormon crickets, which resemble fat grasshoppers, aren't known to bite humans, they give the appearance of invading populated areas by covering buildings, sidewalks and roadways, which has spurred officials to deploy crews to clean up cricket carcasses.
"You can see that they're moving and crawling and the whole road's crawling, and it just makes your skin crawl," Stephanie Garrett of Elko, in northeastern Nevada, told CBS affiliate KUTV. "It's just so gross."
The state's Transportation Department warned motorists around Elko to drive slowly in areas where vehicles have crushed Mormon crickets.
"Crickets make for potentially slick driving," the department said on Twitter last week.
The department has deployed crews to plow and sand highways to improve driving conditions.
Elko's Northeastern Nevada Regional Hospital used whatever was handy to make sure the crickets didn't get in the way of patients.
"Just to get patients into the hospital, we had people out there with leaf blowers, with brooms," Steve Burrows, the hospital's director of community relations, told KSL-TV. "At one point, we even did have a tractor with a snowplow on it just to try to push the piles of crickets and keep them moving on their way."
At the Shilo Inns hotel in Elko, staffers tried using a mixture of bleach, dish soap, hot water and vinegar as well as a pressure washer to ward off the invading insects, according to The New York Times.
Mormon crickets haven't only been found in Elko. In southwestern Idaho, Lisa Van Horne posted a video to Facebook showing scores of them covering a road in the Owyhee Mountains as she was driving.
"I think I may have killed a few," she wrote.
- In:
- Nevada
- Utah
Alex Sundby is a senior editor for CBSNews.com
TwitterveryGood! (96948)
Related
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- Titanic Director James Cameron Breaks Silence on Submersible Catastrophe
- Was 2020 The Year That EVs Hit it Big? Almost, But Not Quite
- Transcript: Rep. Michael McCaul on Face the Nation, July 16, 2023
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Powerball jackpot climbs to $900 million after another drawing with no winners
- Inside Titanic Sub Tragedy Victims Shahzada and Suleman Dawood's Father-Son Bond
- Inside Clean Energy: Clean Energy Wins Big in Covid-19 Legislation
- Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
- Transcript: Mesa, Arizona Mayor John Giles on Face the Nation, July 16, 2023
Ranking
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Japan ad giant and other firms indicted over alleged Olympic contract bid-rigging
- Janet Yellen visits Ukraine and pledges even more U.S. economic aid
- Transcript: National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan on Face the Nation, July 16, 2023
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- An Indigenous Group’s Objection to Geoengineering Spurs a Debate About Social Justice in Climate Science
- Here's why Arizona says it can keep growing despite historic megadrought
- The NHL and Chemours Are Spreading ‘Dangerous Misinformation’ About Ice-Rink Refrigerants, a New Report Says
Recommendation
Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
The Enigmatic ‘Climate Chancellor’ Pulls Off a Grand Finale
Nissan recalls over 800K SUVs because a key defect can cut off the engine
Inside Titanic Sub Tragedy Victims Shahzada and Suleman Dawood's Father-Son Bond
A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. condemned over false claims that COVID-19 was ethnically targeted
One officer shot dead, 2 more critically injured in Fargo; suspect also killed
Catholic Bishops in the US Largely Ignore the Pope’s Concern About Climate Change, a New Study Finds