Cicadas, Climate, and Canine Curiosity: What This Year’s Swarm Means for Vets

Grab your otoscopes and your bug spray, folks – 2025 is giving us a double brood of cicadas, and the dogs are very excited about it.

Two different broods of cicadas are expected to emerge simultaneously this year, covering much of the Midwest and South in a crunchy carpet of insect protein. While entomologists are thrilled, pet parents (and their local veterinary clinics) are left scratching their heads – and possibly dodging vomiting dogs.

What’s the Big Buzz?

Literally? It’s about 90 decibels (the average decibel level for a rock concert is 90-120 decibels). But biologically speaking, cicadas are harmless, fascinating, and…absolutely irresistible to curious canines and opportunistic omnivores. The double brood emergence is a rare phenomenon and an exciting ecological event, but it brings some unintended consequences for pets.

Dogs and Cicada Snacks: A Gastroenteritis Delight

While cicadas aren’t toxic, they’re essentially nature’s crunchy tacos – high in chitin and fiber but hard to digest in bulk. Cue the flood of calls from dog owners reporting vomiting, diarrhea, or that their Labrador has developed an addiction to backyard “barkuterie.”

What to tell Clients:

  • Cicadas are safe in small amounts, but not a dietary staple.
  • Monitor for vomiting, diarrhea, or lethargy.
  • Try distracting your dog with actual food (radical, I know).
  • Don’t panic – just call the vet’s office (that’s you!).

What Vets Need to Watch For:

  • GI Upsets: Most common, self-limiting, but can escalate.
  • Obstructions: Less common, but worth a radiograph if ingestion was excessive.
  • Allergic Reactions: Rare, but a possibility, especially in sensitive dogs.
  • Insecticide Exposure: Some homeowners go pesticide-happy – check for toxicosis signs if ingestion history is unclear.

 

A Teachable Moment

Turn this into an opportunity! This is a great time for clinics to educate clients about safe outdoor behavior, the importance of monitoring what pets eat, and maybe slip in a gentle reminder about flea/tick prevention.

Also, if anyone on staff has entomophobia (fear of insects)…maybe they work inside for the next few weeks.

 

Final Thoughts

We spend so much time dealing with emergencies, burnout, and the unglamorous reality of veterinary medicine that it’s easy to forget we’re living in a world full of weird and wonderful biology. Double cicada broods are a reminder that nature doesn’t do boring – and neither do we.

Stay safe, stay curious, and for the love of all that is holy, tell your clients not to make cicada jerky. Yes, that’s a real thing…unfortunately.

When One Employee Isn’t Pulling Their Weight: A Guide for Practice Managers

When One Employee Isn’t Pulling Their Weight: A Guide for Practice ManagersBecause ignoring the problem isn't a strategy - and neither is hoping it fixes itself. One of the hardest parts of being a practice manager isn’t managing schedules, budgets, or inventory. ...

Supporting a Grieving Team Member: A Practice Manager’s Guide

Supporting a Grieving Team Member: A Practice Manager’s GuideLeadership isn’t about having all the right words - it’s about showing up in the right ways. Vet med is an emotionally demanding profession, even on the best of days.  When a team member is grieving the loss...

Fireworks, Fear, and Front Desk Chaos: Preparing Your Clinic for the Fourth of July Rush

Fireworks, Fear, and Front Desk Chaos: Preparing Your Clinic for the Fourth of July RushBecause if you work in vet med, you know what’s coming.   For most people, Fourth of July means:  Cookouts.Pool days.Fireworks.Patriotic t-shirts.And someone insisting they can...

Scaling Without Breaking Your Team

Scaling Without Breaking Your TeamHow veterinary clinics can grow without burning out the people who got them there.  Growth is exciting. More appointments.More new clients.A busier schedule.A stronger reputation. For many veterinary clinics, growth feels like proof...

Things Veterinary Clinics Should Have Warning Labels For

Things Veterinary Clinics Should Have Warning Labels ForFor the safety of the public - and the sanity of veterinary professionals. Most products come with warning labels. Coffee is hot.Ladders are tall.Chainsaws are dangerous.  And yet somehow, veterinary clinics...

What Veterinary Clinics Should Measure (Besides Revenue)

What Veterinary Clinics Should Measure (Besides Revenue)Because your profit-and-loss statement doesn’t tell the whole story. Revenue matters. Without revenue, veterinary clinics can’t pay staff, invest in equipment, grow services, or continue caring for patients. But...

Phone Calls That Age Veterinary Receptionists Prematurely

Phone Calls That Age Veterinary Receptionists PrematurelyAn entirely scientific study. Veterinary receptionists answer a lot of phone calls. Some are easy.Some are routine. And then there are the ones that remove approximately six months from your life expectancy...

Why “Working Harder” Isn’t Fixing Your Veterinary Clinic Problems

Why “Working Harder” Isn’t Fixing Your Veterinary Clinic ProblemsAt some point, effort stops being the solution. Vet med is full of hardworking people.  Teams stay late.Skip lunches.Cover shifts.Answer one more call.Squeeze in one more appointment.  And for a while,...

If Veterinary Clinic Were Dating Profiles

If Veterinary Clinics Were Dating ProfilesSwipe right at your own risk. At some point, someone in vet med described clinics as a “fast-paced environment” and honestly, that feels wildly understated.  Because if vet clinics had dating profiles, they would all sound:...

The 5 Employees Every Vet Clinic Has

The 5 Employees Every Vet Clinic Has You know them. You love them. You’ve absolutely hidden in the treatment area to avoid one of them. Vet med is a beautiful mix of personalities held together by caffeine, teamwork, and increasingly concerning coping mechanisms. No...

Phone Calls That Age Veterinary Receptionists Prematurely

Phone Calls That Age Veterinary Receptionists PrematurelyAn entirely scientific study. Veterinary receptionists answer a lot of phone calls. Some are easy.Some are routine. And then there are the ones that remove approximately six months from your life expectancy...

If Veterinary Clinic Were Dating Profiles

If Veterinary Clinics Were Dating ProfilesSwipe right at your own risk. At some point, someone in vet med described clinics as a “fast-paced environment” and honestly, that feels wildly understated.  Because if vet clinics had dating profiles, they would all sound:...

The 5 Employees Every Vet Clinic Has

The 5 Employees Every Vet Clinic Has You know them. You love them. You’ve absolutely hidden in the treatment area to avoid one of them. Vet med is a beautiful mix of personalities held together by caffeine, teamwork, and increasingly concerning coping mechanisms. No...

Veterinary Answering Services
You were not leaving your cart just like that, right?

Almost set!

Enter your best email to get assigned a lead to your new account right away.