Thirteen years ago, my first season in the area I'm in now. The lovebugs were carpeting everything. You couldn't breath without sucking one up your nose. No wait, two of them since they stayed locked together. Since then, the numbers have dropped steadily to where I'm not seeing them at all now.
Don't get your hopes up they're disappearing. We'd have lean years like that with fish flies in MI. Then there'd suddenly be an explosion with cars slipping all over the place trying to stop.
Boy, do I remember the fish flies in Michigan. One year, we were (trying) to picnic at Lake Saint Clair Metro Park and the fish flies were so bad, they were almost knee deep on the sidewalk. Of course, a "good" fish fly season is also a good season for fishing. Thank goodness those little boogers have a very short life.
I was told that sometimes, they have to take a snowplow across the bridges to scrape them off for visibility.
Another annoyance in Florida are the "blind mosquitos". They don't bite but they are attracted to white surfaces, so if you have a white vehicle or RV, you'll be covered with them.
I have a funny (or not-so-funny) lovebug story. When my daughter and son-in-law were building their log home, it was still open to the elements during lovebug season. That wasn't a problem, but they came home one day during the next season and the entire inside of the house was COVERED with lovebugs. The cats were losing their minds. Lovebugs on the ceiling, on the walls, on the floors, on the furniture, everywhere!
Every day, they swept and scraped and wiped and then they'd come home and there would be a million more. Finally, they got rid of all of them. Whew! Nope, not so fast.
The next season, they were back. How are they getting in??? Well, we found out. When the house was open, the lovebugs had laid their eggs in the logs (almost the whole inside of the house had exposed logs). Eggs would hatch the next season and the new set would lay more eggs. Then next season, THOSE eggs would hatch.
Lots of pest control finally stopped that little nightmare performance.
Now, we come to the tiny little green frogs. Tiny little guys. We were camping and had unfortunately left the pickup truck open after a rainstorm. The cab was FULL of little green frogs. For days, we'd be driving and I'd feel a cold little thingy on the back of my neck, or my leg, or my shoulder. I'd grab it and fling it out the window. This went on for days until we got them all out.
Oh, Florida, my Florida.
And don't even bring up the falling iguanas in South Florida when it gets cold.. Luckily, we don't have that problem in Central Florida, but if they move North, it's game-on!