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"We've substituted cicadas for crickets and mealworms that some of the other animals get," Sullivan said. Sullivan said since the cicadas started coming out of the ground in big numbers the last few days, animals all over the zoo have been seen eating them, often as soon as the cicadas emerge. The only losers are the cicadas themselves. But Sullivan suggested that if they have to go
-- and they are going to die in about 30 days even if they do avoid being eaten
-- a zoo is as good a place as any. "Getting eaten by exotic animals is a better way to go than being eaten by a squirrel or a crow," he said.
[Text copied from file received from AP Digital]
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