Field Guide
Field Guide
Field Guide
Sorry - not me. My name is Coleomegilla maculata and I am native to North America. I am too long and thin. I am often pinkish and my pronotum is black with red edges not white. Along with aphids, insect eggs and small larvae, I eat a lot of pollen. So you may fi d me in corn and fruit trees! find i d f it t ! Not spots. My distinguishing
feature is not a spot at all, but the two paired marks that look like parenthesis. I am Hippodamia parenthesis or th parenthesis th i the th i ladybug. I am small and I am a native.
Yes!!
CONGRATULATIONS!
I have 4 spots on each elytra and one split in the middle to make 9. My pronotum is black with white , marks on front. So, I am Coccinella novemnotata, the ninespotted ladybug. Please take my picture immediately !!!
L OOKING
New Yorks Honored State Insect
FOR
L OST L ADYBUGS
The nine-spotted ladybug, Coccinella novemnotata (C-9) was once so common in New York and so respected for the great job it did controlling pests that, in 1985, it was proposed as the state insect by a fourth grade student. Unfortunately by the time C-9 was honored in 1989 a precipitous population decline student Unfortunately, C9 had already begun. There had been no confirmed collections of this ladybug in the eastern US since 1992 until one was found by Jilene (age 11) and Jonathon (age 10) Penhale (identified by Jordan Perlman) in 2006. This gave experts a place to start hunting! There may be a rare ladybug in your back yard right now!
Unanswered Questions?
Were these key components of our local ecosystems displaced by other lady bugs introduced to control pests? How will the loss of native predators affect the control of agricultural pests? Can they be reestablished like the wolves of Yellowstone? What can we learn from the demise of the nine-spotted and the two-spotted ladybugs that will help us to prevent the loss of other species?
Find more information and kids activities at: www.lostladybug.org Funded by the National Science Foundation