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Summer has left the air thick with humidity, heat, and flying cockroaches. Six-legged cockroaches that typically crawl through sewers at night now fly. While New Yorkers were sweating profusely all through the weekend with a temperature of over 90degrees Fahrenheit and a lot of humidity, cockroaches were spotted flying around.

A bug expert, Louis Sorkin told a popular New York blog, that more heat gives roaches more energy which leads to more activity, and in essence more flight. This indicates that cockroaches who rarely fly may want to stretch their wings and go airborne. Apart from being difficult to squish, their ability to squeeze through very tiny cracks and bite with a lot of force, cockroaches can also fly.

Cockroaches do not just buzz around; the insects can decide to take flight just to find a cooler habitat. Srini Kambhampati, a professor of the biology department at the University of Texas told NBC News. However, he also said that they are weak fliers and prefer to run.

American cockroaches may fly only when they need to get away from something fast. The Most favorable temperature for a roach is 77 degrees Fahrenheit, with 86 degrees considered as being excessively hot. According to the reports, New York got as hot as 89 degrees this weekend.

The density of trash cans and food supply for street roaches has led them to depend less on their wings. Evolution made their wings less significant to them. There is more than enough food around so they do not use their wings as much as they used to.

While some roaches are known to fly as long as a city block, New York City cockroaches are more likely to glide from one spot to another. New Yorkers are scared of having to deal with flying roaches in addition to the extreme heat.