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Tag Archives: harlequin ladybird

On the fence

14 Wednesday Dec 2022

Posted by sconzani in insects

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

British springtails, harlequin ladybird, hoverfly larvae, ladybirds, springtail, Syrphus sp larvae, Syrphus species

Last week, before our current cold snap (though we’ve had no snow, it was -8C in the bitter easterly wind today), I was amazed at how many insects I found on and around a black metal fence that borders a local park.

221214 fence

I was initially checking for hoverfly larvae, as I was alerted a couple of years back to the fact that they can often be found on fences and other objects under trees like Sycamore – I think they fall when the leaves fall, then stay on the fence rails gobbling up any aphids that also fall. The four hoverfly larvae I found (shown below the lovely blue-bodied fly) are all from the Syrphus genus (but it’s not possible to identify them to species level), but I was surprised to also find an abundance of Springtails and more than 20 ladybirds, almost all Harlequin. I don’t know why the fence attracted them all – it felt cold to the touch but perhaps the black paint meant the surface was warm when the sun did actually shine.

221214 insects on the fence

 

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Ladybirds galore

11 Thursday Nov 2021

Posted by sconzani in insects, ladybird

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

British ladybirds, harlequin ladybird, Harlequin ladybird larva, ladybird larva

I was really surprised during Tuesday’s walk to see so many ladybirds still about – not only adults but also a lot of larvae, and this one pair of adults that obviously thought it was springtime not late autumn.

On one small section of nettles growing along the road verge there were over 20 ladybirds.

211111 ladybirds (2)

Unfortunately, every single one was a Harlequin ladybird – not a 7-spot or other species to be seen.

211111 ladybirds (3)
211111 ladybirds (4)
211111 ladybirds (5)
211111 ladybirds (6)

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Hannibal Harlequin

15 Thursday Jul 2021

Posted by sconzani in insects, ladybird

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

7-spot ladybird, 7-spot ladybird pupa, British ladybirds, Harlequin eating 7-spot, harlequin ladybird, Harlequin ladybird larva

In the Silence of the Lambs, it was Hannibal Lecter; in the world of ladybirds, it’s Hannibal Harlequin. Yes, folks, though I’m sure you all thought ladybirds were cute, it’s actually a ladybird eats ladybird world out there! In this case, a Harlequin ladybird larva is eating the pupa of a 7-spot ladybird.

210715 ladybirds

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186/366 Miscellaneous minis

04 Saturday Jul 2020

Posted by sconzani in insects, nature

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Tags

British insects, Common Green Shieldbug, Grypocoris stysi, harlequin ladybird, Ichneumonid wasp, Orange ladybird

These are a few recent insect that have caught my eye …

200704 1 common green shieldbug

First up, the 4th instar of a Common green shieldbug that was walking along the outside of a building as I passed. These mini-beasties go through five different instars (stages) before becoming adults. For more see A (shield)bug’s life, September 2016.

200704 2 Grypocoris stysi

A flower bug that loves umbellifers, Grypocoris stysi. You can read more about him/her in my previous blog, Get a Gryp-o!, July 2016.

200704 3 ladybird orange (1)
200704 4 ladybird orange (2)

I found this Orange ladybird browsing on leaves covered with a white mould, their favourite food. See more on these little cuties in A Blast of Orange, July 2017.

200704 5 wasp black ichneumonid

I’ve been spotting a lot of Ichneumonid wasps this year. Most are quite difficult to identify, as you need to photograph them from several different angles to capture all the identifying features and I find they don’t usually stay still long enough.

200704 6 ladybird harlequin

And, last for today, what I think is a Harlequin ladybird, judging from the patterns on the now-empty pupa case. When newly emerged, ladybirds are often pale coloured and dot-less – the colours darken and the spots emerge in their first few hours as adults.

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123/365 A Bramble confection

03 Friday May 2019

Posted by sconzani in 365DaysWildin2019, insects, nature, spring

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

#365DaysWild, British insects, Dock bug, Eristalis sp, Green shieldbug, harlequin ladybird, hoverfly, insects on bramble, Nursery web spider, Speckled wood, Syrphus sp, wasp

Ingredients: 1 patch of Bramble, lashings of sunshine, a tablespoon of warmth, a dash of Springtime
Method: Stand and stare
Result: Nursery web spider, Dock bug, hoverfly (Syrphus sp.), Speckled wood butterfly, Green shieldbug, bee species, another hoverfly (Eristalis sp.), Harlequin ladybird, and wasp (Vespula sp.).

190503 critters on bramble (1)
190503 critters on bramble (2)
190503 critters on bramble (3)
190503 critters on bramble (4)
190503 critters on bramble (5)
190503 critters on bramble (6)
190503 critters on bramble (7)
190503 critters on bramble (8)
190503 critters on bramble (9)

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What do ladybirds eat?

10 Friday Aug 2018

Posted by sconzani in flowers, insects, ladybird, nature, plants, wildflowers

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

7-spot ladybirds, aphids, Cosmeston, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, harlequin ladybird, ladybirds, Wild parsnip

I googled ‘What do ladybirds eat?’ today because I was trying to work out why there are so many ladybirds – about a 50 / 50 split between 7-spots and Harlequins – on the Wild parsnip plants at Cosmeston Lakes Country Park. It turns out ladybirds are particularly keen on aphids and, as you can see in some of my photos, there are rather a lot of aphids on these plants. Good news for the ladybirds!

180810 ladybirds on wild parsnip (1)
180810 ladybirds on wild parsnip (2)

180810 ladybirds on wild parsnip (3)
180810 ladybirds on wild parsnip (4)

180810 ladybirds on wild parsnip (5)
180810 ladybirds on wild parsnip (6)

180810 ladybirds on wild parsnip (7)
180810 ladybirds on wild parsnip (8)

180810 ladybirds on wild parsnip (9)
180810 ladybirds on wild parsnip (10)

180810 ladybirds on wild parsnip (11)
180810 ladybirds on wild parsnip (12)

180810 ladybirds on wild parsnip (13)
180810 ladybirds on wild parsnip (14)

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Bishy-barnabee & Co

02 Tuesday May 2017

Posted by sconzani in insects, ladybird, nature

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

14-spot ladybird, 18-spot ladybird, 22-spot ladybird, 7-spot ladybird, Bishy-barnabee, harlequin ladybird, ladybird, Orange ladybird, Robert Macfarlane, vernacular names for ladybird

If you’re on Twitter and follow one of my favourite authors, Robert Macfarlane, you’ll know that he tweets a ‘word of the day’. Yesterday’s was ‘Bishy-barnabee’, a vernacular name for the ladybird used by folk who live in the English county of Norfolk. I adore these common names – they are often old, come from a time when folk paid more attention to the natural world, observing the habits and customs of the creatures around them, or they named creatures after concepts and ideas that were important to them. Macfarlane listed other ladybird names too: cushcow, goldie-bird, red-sodger, and kingcollawa. In Fauna Britannica, Stefan Buczacki lists even more: as well as bishie barni-bee, he has bishop barnabee, bishop is burning, bishop that burneth (all from Norfolk); clock-o’clay and cow lady (from Yorkshire); God Almighty’s cow, God’s little cow and King Galowa (from Scotland); and ladycow, lady fly, lady lanners, Mary gold and sodger (from Northumberland). I’m sure there are many many more.

Here is a selection of the Bishy-barnabees I have photographed (using the mostly numerical descriptions we more commonly use these days: two 7-spots, a 14-spot, an 18-spot, a 22-spot, 3 Harlequins and an Orange).

170501 ladybird 7-spot (1)
170501 ladybird 7-spot (2)
170501 ladybird 14-spot
170501 ladybird 18-spot
170501 ladybird 22-spot
170501 ladybird Harlequin (1)
170501 ladybird Harlequin (2)
170501 ladybird Harlequin (3)
170501 ladybird Orange

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Feasting on ivy flowers

30 Friday Sep 2016

Posted by sconzani in autumn, flowers, insects, nature

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Tags

harlequin ladybird, ivy, ivy flowers, ladybird

160930-ladybird-on-ivy

This little Harlequin ladybird was just one of the many insects – flies and hoverflies, honey bees, bumblebees and wasps, and a Red Admiral butterfly – that were enjoying the nectar and pollen to be found on these ivy flowers, an important source of food for so many insects in the autumn months.

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The ladybird lifecycle

09 Tuesday Aug 2016

Posted by sconzani in insects, nature

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

Halyzia 16-punctata, harlequin ladybird, Harmonia axyridis, ladybird, ladybird larva, ladybird lifecycle, ladybird pupa, Orange ladybird

Just like every other insect, a ladybird goes through a complete transformation during its short, one-year life but the various stages are something I’ve only become aware of this year so I thought I’d share them with you.

160809 ladybird (1) 22 spot
160809 ladybird (2)

Adult ladybirds spend the cold winter months in a dormant state, awakening in the springtime as the weather begins to warm up. After munching away on some aphids to get their juices flowing again, they look for a member of the opposite sex and mate. I don’t have any egg photos but they are, apparently, bright yellow and are laid on the underside of leaves. Once the mating and egg-laying are complete, the adult ladybirds die.

160809 ladybird (3)
160809 ladybird (4)
160809 ladybird (5) orange Halyzia 16-punctata

Depending on the temperature and weather conditions, the eggs hatch after 3 to 10 days and the little larvae immediately begin eating: scale insects and aphids are their favourites so you can see why gardeners love them. At this stage, they look nothing at all like ladybirds, though they do have unique patterns – left and centre above are Harlequins (Harmonia axyridis) and the one on the right is an Orange (Halyzia 16-punctata).

160809 ladybird (6)
160809 ladybird (7)

After 3 to 4 weeks of constant eating, the larvae pupate, shedding their larval skin and changing into this strange-looking blob you can find attached to the tops of leaves. The metamorphosis from larvae to adult ladybird only takes 7 to 10 days – a miracle really!

160809 ladybird (8)

When the adult ladybird first emerges from its pupa, it is very pale and takes a little while for its final colours to show, though you can usually see traces of its spots. And that’s it! The adult will trundle around the leaves, eating all those pesky aphids until the winter months come, and the whole process will begin all over again.

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Springtime in the shrubbery

16 Monday May 2016

Posted by sconzani in insects, nature, spring

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

crane fly, Green dock beetle, harlequin ladybird, St Mark's flies

I took myself off on a long walk yesterday afternoon, no backpack full of camera gear, just my point ‘n’ shoot in my hand, intending to walk not look for critters. But, no sooner had I got to the start of the walk proper than the critters began presenting themselves, and I began to feel rather like a voyeur.

160516 Harlequin Ladybirds

First it was the Harlequin ladybirds, on the very top leaves of a bramble so hard to miss, and three of them. Was the second female waiting her turn, basking in the afterglow, or something of a voyeur herself?

160516 Green Dock Beetle

A metallic flash on the neighbouring bush caught my eye and there were a couple of Green dock beetles, also getting into the swing of spring, though I think the male was a little confused as to how to go about things. He won’t accomplish much just riding on the female’s back.

160516 crane flies

Further on, I bent down to re-tie my shoelace and what should I see but two Crane flies, making more Crane flies.

160516 Long-horned black legionnaire

And I almost stood on these final two, blatantly having it off in the middle of the footpath. I think they’re Long-horned black legionnaire beetles**, though I’m not entirely sure. They, like all the other minibeasts, were certainly feeling stimulated by the Sunday sunshine.

** Many thanks to Paul Challinor. These are actually St Mark’s flies (Bibio marci).

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About me

sconzani

sconzani

I'm a writer and photographer; researcher and blogger; birder and nature lover; countryside rambler and city strider; volunteer and biodiversity recorder.

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