Lady Beetles Towards a European field guide.
Lady Beetles (Coccinellidae) These great little garden helpers are widely referred to as ladybugs but in fact these helpful insects are not bugs at all, they are beetles. The term ladybug is considered scientifically to be slang for the correct name Lady Beetle. Other popular names include ladybird and ladybird beetle. Coccinellidae means "little sphere" and their shiny, often brightly colored bodies are dome shaped, oval, or convex. There are about 5.000 different species of lady beetles in the world! But only a few hundred of them live in Europe.
Range
As you can see from the map lady beetles can be found almost worldwide but especially in temperate climates.
Habitat
Lady beetles can often be found in a variety of foliage such as gardens, trees, shrubs, flowers, forests, weed patches and fields. In some areas lady beetles are found infesting peoples homes as well.
What do lady beetles eat? Lady beetles are omnivores and eat a variety of things that make them famous as a source for organic and biological pest control.
Lady beetles particularly like aphids and may eat upwards of 5,000 in it's lifetime. Also on the menu for these hungry little pest eaters are small insects such as whitefly, mealybugs, scales, mites, bollworm, broccoli worm, tomato hornworm and cabbage moth. They will also eat the eggs of some insects such as moth eggs and certain lady beetles eat pollen and mildew. Rarely but if necessary a lady beetle may resort to cannibalism.
Do lady beetles sleep?
Lady beetles are active during the day and go into a state of rest at night. In this period of rest, they are unresponsive to things going on around them. When an individual lady beetle goes into this state seems to vary slightly from lady beetle to lady beetle.
Diapause Diapause is the insect version of hibernation. It is thought that lady beetles engage in this activity to conserve resources and to facilitate reproduction. These cute little critters gather in places such as tree trunks, logs, ground cover, buildings & sometimes in peoples homes when temperatures drop below 13째C. Lady beetles require heat acquired from their environment to maintain and regulate their body temperature. Below this temperature you will not see lady beetles active or flying around.
Defenses •
•
The bright colors on many species of lady beetles warn predators that they will not make a good meal. This method of protection works so well that many species that wouldn't make a predator sick, mimic the color patterns of lady beetles that are poisonous. Lady beetles don't bite humans the same way a flea or mosquito does but they can pinch with their mandibles. Normally you would not notice or be hurt by it.
•
Lady beetles can also play dead! If a predator gets to close to them, they may choose to fall lifelessly into the bushes below them or fall and dangle in a very still position upside down after being spotted.
•
Lady beetles can also release a bad smelling & tasting orange chemical from their joints to deter predators. This is known as "reflex bleeding" and generally occurs when a lady beetle is under stress.
Life cycle The time it takes for a lady beetle egg to hatch and become an adult takes about 3 to 4 weeks depending on the weather conditions. Their life cycle sure does happen fast! lady beetle eggs are very small, oval in shape and are a pale yellow color. Mother lady beetles lay their eggs usually on the undersides of leaves to keep them protected from hungry predators. She makes sure that she leaves her eggs close to a lot of food (aphids) so her little darlings will have plenty to eat once they hatch 3 to 5 days after she lays the eggs. Baby lady beetles (lady beetle larvae) are a little spikey looking and some say that they resemble alligators, a whole lot smaller of course! Baby lady beetles are virtually as predatory as their parents and spend their days eating and eating and eating, they can eat up to 400 aphids in 2 to 3 weeks. After the lady beetle babies have filled their little bellies and grown a bit they attach themselves to a leaf and pupate. This is the transition stage when in about a week they will turn into a beautiful little adult lady beetle.
Fun facts •
When a lady beetle flies, it beats its wings about 5100 times a minute or about 85 beats a second.
• As lady beetles age, the color of their spots fades. • Lady beetles breathe through openings on the sides of their bodies. • In 1999, NASA sent lady beetles and aphids up in the space shuttle to test their movements in zero gravity. • In its lifetime, a female lady beetle will lay as many as 2.000 eggs. • A lady beetle can retract its head into its body.
How to find lady beetles?
Visual search for lady beetles A good visual search for lady beetles is probably the most natural and typical way people begin searching for lady beetles. It's fun to get outside and start observing nearby plants and foliage to see if you can find these wonderful little insects. However if these are less common in your area or you are not used to seeing lady beetles, this particular technique for finding them may require some knowledge of their biology.
Beating - Branches or plants to catch lady beetles You'll be amazed how many interesting things you will collect in addition to lady beetles using this technique. The simple process involves first getting or making a device for collecting lady beetles such as a net, umbrella or a homemade beating tray (as in the figure). You then beat tree branches and vegetation and let the debris and insects collect on your device.
Sweeping for lady beetles This is a great technique for catching lady beetles and really fun for kids as well. Using a net make scooping motions across vegetation. The sweeping motion will collect lady beetles and other insects that are crawling on the shoots of grasses, small branches and flowers. Because the motion is done in relative quick speed many little insects that may normally fly away are caught in the net including lady beetles. Examine the content of your net to see what really cool creatures you have collected.
Recording and submitting the data
www.ladybeetles.eu/observations real-time project results
& an overview map
Create an account • Our project page is hosted by Observado.org, it’s necessary to register yourself before submitting the data, this makes it possible for us to ask additional questions about sightings of rare species.
• Registering is easy! Just press “create account” in the top right corner. • Fill in the required fields and submit the form, now you can start adding data.
Adding observations
• •
When did you do an observation? Where did you do an observation?
•
Choose “beetles” as the species group
•
Fill in the name of the species And on the next line the number of lady beetles you found for this species
•
After “plumage” please fill in: “imago”, which means that it’s an adult insect
•
You can add as much details as you like in the “remarks” field.
•
After adding a species you can upload pictures for it, this is optional.