The Backyard Jungle:
The benefits of having ladybugs in the garden.
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Ladybird beetles generally lay their eggs near aphids or other prey.
PHOTOS BY THE AUTHOR
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Here's the seventh in a series of articles that will
help you tell friend from foe in your garden.
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Part VII, Ladybird Beetles
By Ron West
Few gardeners fail to recognize the friendly ladybird
beetle, also known as the ladybug. This fierce little
predator is one of nature's prime defenses against many
garden pests, especially aphids. The moniker
ladybug refers to Our Lady, the Virgin Mary, and
was gratefully bestowed upon this beetle in the Middle Ages
by farmers who realized the insect's value in ridding their
grapevines of pests. But though the ladybird's actions have
been extolled for centuries, few people really understand
the biology of this tiny benefactor ... and fewer still can
discern the ladybug's immature forms.
Of the hundreds of species of ladybird beetles (family
Coccinellidae), the most widespread and familiar is the
convergent ladybird beetle, Hippodamia convergens,
which is pictured here. The brilliant red color of this and
similar species is not intended to dazzle human
retinas but serves as a warning to predators, for the body
fluids of these beetles are quite distasteful. Red, orange,
and yellow species are most prevalent, but you might run
across black, tan, or multicolored ladybirds, as well.
Like most insects that undergo complete metamorphosis, the
ladybug begins its life as an egg. The adult female lays
clusters of these minute, bright yellow gems in crevices of
tree bark or on the undersides of protected leaves where
there's a sufficient number of prey to support the larvae.
From each egg emerges a tapered larva that's typically
charcoal gray with white, orange, or red markings and that
bears a certain resemblance to a chubby miniature
alligator.
Though the adult ladybirds are also predators, it's the
immature larvae that take the largest toll on garden pests.
Ravenous in appetite, a larva may consume as many as 40
aphids in a single hour! Other soft-bodied creatures are
also on its menu, including mealy bugs , immature scale
insects, young whiteflies, small caterpillars, and mites.
The larva—which ranges in size from 1/16" to 1/4",
depending on its maturity—completes its growth in
about 20 days, at which point it fastens itself to a leaf
or other object, hangs its head downward, and enters the
pupal stage, forming a teardrop-shaped cocoon in which the
transformation into an adult beetle takes place.