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LADYBUGS (OR LADYBIRDS)
COCCINELLIDAE
L
adybugs (known as ladybirds in the UK) are
among the best-known and best-loved of
insects, even if people don’t always know that they
are, in fact, beetles! These instantly recognizable,
hemispherical, and brightly colored little insects
move around openly, seemingly unafraid and
inoffensive, even in parks and gardens, and often fly
onto people. They have become the subject of a lot
of folklore, and inspired children’s poems, rhymes,
and sayings. In many cultures ladybugs are thought
to bring good luck, and their name in several
languages connects them with divinity. “Ladybird”
comes from “Our Lady,” the Virgin Mary, and this
connection is even more explicit in, for example,
the German marienkafer (Mary’s beetle). Early
depictions of the Virgin Mary showed her in a red
cloak, and the seven spots of the common red
species (Coccinella septempunctata) apparently
represented her seven joys and seven sorrows.
Other translated names include God’s cow, Moses’s
family
Coccinellidae
known species
6,000
distribution
Worldwide
habitat
Gardens and parks, forests, plains,
agricultural land
size
0.8–18 mm
diet
Many species eat aphids and other small
insects. Others feed on mildews and similar
fungi growing on plants, and a few feed on
the leaves of the plants themselves
notes
The variable-colored Harlequin Ladybug
Harmonia axyridis from East Asia is an
effective predator of aphids and other small
plant pests, and has been introduced to
Europe and North America for biological
control. In both continents, it has become
COCCINELLIDAE—Ladybugs (or Ladybirds)