![]() ![]() The significance of such nonprey items in their diets is still under investigation and discussion. Besides the prey they favour, most predatory coccinellids include other items in their diets, including honeydew, pollen, plant sap, nectar, and various fungi. As a family, the Coccinellidae used to be regarded as purely carnivorous, but they are now known to be far more omnivorous than previously thought, both as a family and in individual species examination of gut contents of apparently specialist predators commonly yield residues of pollen and other plant materials. ![]() Larvae and eggs of ladybirds, either their own or of other species, can also be an important food resource when alternative prey are scarce. Several genera feed on various insects or their eggs for example, Coleomegilla species are significant predators of the eggs and larvae of moths such as species of Spodoptera and the Plutellidae. Various larger species of Coccinellidae attack caterpillars and larvae of other beetles. They are natural predators of a range of serious pests, such as the European corn borer, a moth that costs US agriculture industry more than $1 billion annually in crop losses and population control. Stethorus species accordingly are important in certain examples of biological control. ![]() A genus of small black ladybirds, Stethorus, presents one example of predation on non-Sternorrhyncha they specialise in mites as prey, notably Tetranychus spider mites. ![]() Ĭoccinellids are best known as predators of Sternorrhyncha such as aphids and scale insects, but the range of prey species that various Coccinellidae may attack is much wider. Coccinellids are found worldwide, with over 6,000 species described. For example, a minority of species, such as Vibidia duodecimguttata, a twelve-spotted species, have whitish spots on a brown background. There is, however, great variation in these colour patterns. DescriptionĬoccinellids are often conspicuously coloured yellow, orange, or red with small black spots on their wing covers, with black legs, heads and antennae. Common names in some other European languages share associations for example, the German name Marienkäfer translates to Marybeetle. In the United States, the name was adapted to ladybug. Mary (Our Lady) was often depicted wearing a red cloak in early paintings, and the spots of the seven-spot ladybird (the most common in Europe) were said to symbolise her seven joys and seven sorrows. The name ladybird originated in Britain where the insects became known as "Our Lady's bird" or the Lady beetle. The name coccinellids is derived from the Latin word coccineus meaning "scarlet".
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