Ladybird Beetle(Coccinellidae) is one kind of insect. Ladybird beetle is commonly known as ladybugs in North America and ladybirds in Britain. Ladybirds are generally considered useful insects and one of the greatest allies of the farmer and the gardener as many species feed on aphids or scale insects.Ladybird Beetle(Coccinellidae)
Information
Name
Their scientific name is Coccinellidae. The name "ladybird" originated in Britain where the insects became known as "the Lady beetle". Ladybird beetle is also known as 'Ladybug'.
Scientific Classification
Ladybird beetles belong to the family Coccinellidae. Ladybird beetles are small-sized insect species. There are 9000 species in the world. Their conservation status is 'Not extinct'.
Living & Habitat
Ladybird beetles are found in America, Asia, Europe. They are habitats such as Grasslands, Forests, Cities, Suburbs.
Physical Classification
Ladybird beetle is a small-sized insect and the whole body covers the shell. Ladybird beetles are small, round to oval, and dome-shaped. An adult ladybird beetle's length around 1 mm to 18 mm. Their weight around 20 mg to 80 mg. They can fly at speed of up to 15 km/h.
Diet
Ladybird beetles are mainly part of the Omnivores diet, which means they eat meat and plants. They mostly eat pollen, mildew, mushrooms, plants. They also have some natural predators like big insects, aphids, spiders.
Lifestyle
Their lifespan up to 2 to 3 years. Ladybird beetles are nocturnal, diurnal both. They are colony-centric insects. At the age of 9 to 12 days males and females, are ready to sexually mature. After the incubation period lasts around 7 to 8 days. Ladybird beetles lay 1170 eggs in a breeding season.
Sort Facts
- An adult ladybird can live for between 1 and 3 years.
- There are believed to be 47 different ladybird species in the UK but over 9000 species globally.
- Some female ladybirds are infected with a bacterium that kills male embryos.
- Ladybirds hibernate from October all the way through to February.
References
Wikipedia.org: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coccinellidae
Image: Photo by Filipe Resmini on Unsplash
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