Cicadas

FDA Says to Not Eat Cicadas If You Have a Seafood Allergy

Billions of cicadas are emerging in the Eastern U.S. To some, they're a delicacy. To others, they're a danger

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The cicadas are back, and with them a warning from the Food and Drug Administration: Don't eat these critters if you have a seafood allergy.

"Yep! We have to say it! Don't eat #cicadas if you're allergic to seafood as these insects share a family relation to shrimp and lobsters," the agency tweeted Wednesday.

Fish and shellfish are two of the eight major food allergens that must be labeled on food packaging, according to the FDA, along with milk, eggs, tree nuts, peanuts, wheat and soybean. Together, these allergens account for 90% of food allergies in the U.S.

Allergies related to eating insects, however, need more study, according to a recent report by the Food Agricultural Organization of the United Nations. The report, which focused on the safety of eating insects, noted that "individuals already allergic to crustaceans are particularly vulnerable to developing allergic reactions to edible insects, due to allergen cross-reactivity."

Storm Team4 Chief Meteorologist Doug Kammerer ate gourmet cicada dishes. The second course: beef chili dogs topped with cicadas made by Xavier Deshayes, Executive Chef for the Ronald Reagan Building.

Read the full story on NBCNews.com

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