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Variegated Lady Beetle - Hippodamia variegata Pterygota » Coleoptera (Beetles) » Coccinellidae (Ladybird Beetles) » Hippodamia These beneficial insects are seen on water hemlock flowers. They are feeding on pollen. [Cirrus Home] [Beetles Main Page Graphics] [Beetles Alphabetic Table of Contents] |
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Ladybugs, also called lady beetles or ladybird beetles, are actually beetles in the Coleoptera family Coccinellidae. As insects go, they are a very beneficial group, being natural enemies of many insects, especially aphids and other critters that damage plants by feeding on their sap. A single ladybug can consume vast quantities of aphids in its lifetime, perhaps as many as 5,000 or more. There is a brisk business in commercial ladybugs for aphid control, and some of the species found here in North America are actually "invasives" brought from Europe or Asia for such purpose. Coccinella septempunctata, the seven-spotted ladybug, sometimes called ‘C-7', is a medium-sized, orange beetle with seven black spots. It is a European species that was introduced into the US to aid in managing some aphid pests. Harmonia axyridis, the Multicolored Asian lady beetle, was introduced to North America many times, finally taking hold and becoming established in the 1980's. This invasive has become far and away the most numerous of the Coccinellids here in the midwest, and they are becoming one of the most annoying insect pests, invading homes to overwinter, much as the box elder bug. |

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Adult ladybugs have convex,
hemispherical shaped elytra (the hardened wings used to cover the
soft flying wings underneath) that can be yellow, pink, orange, red,
or black, and usually are marked with distinct spots. This is a type
of warning coloration (aposematic coloring), thought to discourage
predators. Lady beetles also have another defense: an odorous,
noxious fluid that seeps out of their leg joints when the insects
are disturbed. I can trutfully say, I've been fooling with ladybugs
since I was a child, but I've never noticed such a thing. It must be
that the quantity of such fluid is so small as to affect only small
creatures. |
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