Ladybugs |
Predatory Beetles |
Parasitic Wasps |
Predatory/Parasitic Flies |
Predatory Bugs |
Lacewings |
Mantids |
Spiders |
Dragonflies |
A Convergent Lady beetle, Hippodamia convergens, feeds in a buckwheat flower. | Lady beetle eggs on Bronze Fennel. | Harmonia axyridis ladybeetle and a syrphid fly share a mustard flower that was intentionally planted to encourage these predators. |
Identifying the 4 Most Common Ladybugs
I. How to tell Ladybeetles from Other Insects
Ladybugs are insects that are in the Order Coleoptera (meaning sheath-wing), commonly called beetles. Ladybeetles can vary in color from solid black with 2 red spots to solid orange or red, or they can have variable black spot patterns, sometimes with yellow or red spots. Ladybugs are in the beetle family that entomologists call Coccinellidae. Coccinellid beetles all have the following family characters: the shape of ladybeetles is very distinctive; they have an elongated to oval or hemispherical body; the antennae are eleven-segmented, and they are inserted at the inner margin of the eyes below the front; the antennae have a 3-segmented club on the end; ladybugs can also retract their heads like a turtle into the prothorax; and they have a convex elytra (hard shell wings that cover the inner pair of wings). Almost all beetles in this family are good; however there are 2 pest beetles in this family, the Mexican Bean beetle (Epilachna varivestis Mulsant) and the Squash beetle. They are usually pale yellow and somewhat hairy with 16 or so spots, so watch out!
II. Common Identification Characters of the 4 Most Common Ladybugs
If you have one of these ladybugs, identification can be fairly simple.
1. First, what is the body type of your lady beetle?
The two main body types are oval and round (hemispherical).
A. Round Ladybugs 2 Types
Ladybugs can retract their head into their body like a turtle (A).
Normally their head is out as in B. Also, another identifying character
is that the antennae of ladybugs are attached below the front part of
the eyes. |
C7 (Coccinella septempunctata L.) or the Seven-Spotted Ladybeetle.–We start with the earliest appearing ladybug in the vegetable fields – the C7 ladybug. These ladybugs overwinter in the bark of trees and similar habitats. I am always impressed to see them in relatively barren fields, honing in on the vegetable plants there. Identification: The C7 Ladybug has seven spots on the elytra (hard shelled wings on the back of the beetle); three spots on either side and one joined at the center top near the thorax and head region. Food plants: C7 ladybugs love any type of mustard plant as well
as other early blooming nectar and pollen sources, like buckwheat, cilantro,
legumes like vetches and red or crimson clover. Also, early aphid sources,
like bronze fennel.
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The Multicolored Asian Ladybeetle, Harmonia axyridis, congregate in the fall to overwinter. Larvae can be distinguished from other species by the presence of small pads or flaps that project off the back of the larva. After the first hard frost or two, the adults begin to think about getting together to overwinter. In their native lands of China and Japan, the original places they overwintered were on rock outcroppings in the mountains. If your home is light colored and on the side of a mountain, or similar setup, it probably looks just like a big rock outcropping to a ladybug, and this might explain why one October day, the side of your house is covered in ladybugs!! If your neighbor complains about having ladybugs, then collect them for yourself! There are several ways to collect Harmonia. Probably the easiest method is to use a vacuum cleaner (with a new bag), or a long tube sock that you can take out and replace, or a dust buster, and vacuum them up when they start to congregate outside. There are several other methods to collect ladybugs. The Chinese consider it good luck to have these in your house, but if there are too many in your house, see if a nearby gardener or farmer would like to get them for their garden.
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Hippodamia convergens, the “Classic California”
Convergent ladybug, has been shipped nationally for over 100
years, and therefore is naturalized throughout most of the US. It was
originally native to California and the other pacific coastal states.
These are the best overall ladybugs to release against soft-bodied vegetable
pests. The adults are oblong, orange with variable spots. Larvae and
adults actively eat aphids, mites, eggs (pest butterfly/moths eggs,
Colorado Potato Beetle eggs, etc.) of almost any kind, small caterpillars
that they come across (including others of their own kind if they are
hungry).
Food Plants: Wild carrot family (dill, fennel, cilantro, etc.) |
Ladybug Handling and Release:
Keep ladybugs as one of your main pillars of pest defenses in
the your farm and garden. Good luck!