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Greg WibblyWobbly
12-29-2005, 01:10 AM
Experts Say British Ladybugs in Danger
Wednesday, December 28, 2005 8:09 PM EST
The Associated Press
By RASHI KHILNANI

LONDON (AP) ? British ladybugs are in danger of being overrun by insects from Central and Southeast Asia that are encroaching on their food supply, experts said Wednesday.

Harlequin ladybugs, already a pest in North America, were first spotted in Britain in September 2004 and are flourishing without the presence of natural predators.

Michael Majerus, of Cambridge University, predicted the foreign ladybugs ? the insects are known in Britain as ladybirds ? could be found all around the country by 2008.

"There are currently 46 species of British ladybird," he said. "A few of those may be lost 10 to 20 years down the road."

Scientists launched a survey at the Natural History Museum in March to track the pesky beauties. Majerus said the public had been extremely helpful.

Harlequins are orange with black spots or black with either red or orange spots and larger than their British counterparts.

Introduced to the United States to control aphid populations, the harlequins morphed into pests by 1988, blemishing soft fruit, ruining grapes meant for wine production and invading homes.

After similar insect control programs in continental Europe, harlequins made their way to Britain by hitching rides on flowers shipped from the Netherlands and Belgium.

The bugs are able to fly for miles and up to 10,000 feet high and Majerus believes that many simply flew over the English Channel.

Harlequins have a voracious appetite and eat aphids, pollen, nectar and even other ladybugs. They have even been known to nip humans when hungry.

If temperatures are right, harlequins can produce two or three generations annually. Native British ladybugs are limited to one generation per year.

Harlequins also threaten other species that eat aphids, and those who, in turn, eat them, and can disrupt entire ecosystems.

"This is a concern worldwide in terms of invasive species unless we want to have a global fauna," said Helen Roy, a ladybug expert at Anglia Polytechnic University.

Currently, scientists have no way of stopping the bugs.

dazzlestar14
12-29-2005, 09:16 AM
That's horrible! I hope the scientists can come up with some methods for stopping the bugs. :(

Greg WibblyWobbly
12-29-2005, 05:22 PM
I love Ladybugs !!!

dazzlestar14
12-29-2005, 06:42 PM
Me too, just not the sound of these Harlequin ones!

Greg WibblyWobbly
12-31-2005, 04:42 AM
The Praying Mantis of Ladybugs.... A new movie...
KILLER LADYBUGS !!!!!

spoonme
02-06-2006, 02:46 AM
I never knew that! Ladybirds are so nice (for a bug)! Why can't it be spiders that are on their way to extinction? I know...circle of life and all that but why make them so God damn scary?

Greg WibblyWobbly
02-07-2006, 01:49 AM
I never knew that! Ladybirds are so nice (for a bug)! Why can't it be spiders that are on their way to extinction? I know...circle of life and all that but why make them so God damn scary?

I had tons of spiders for pets...

spoonme
02-07-2006, 01:58 AM
quote]

I had tons of spiders for pets... [/quote]

That's just WRONG!!!

dazzlestar14
02-07-2006, 01:44 PM
Watching "Charlotte's Web" as a child changed my view on spiders forever. I still think they are creepy, crawly, and want them out of my house, but I feel for them. They are creatures too and their webs can look like a masterpiece!

Greg WibblyWobbly
02-08-2006, 01:26 AM
quote]

I had tons of spiders for pets...

That's just WRONG!!![/quote]
:lol2: :lol: :lol2:

Bunches of hairy Tarantulas. I've always thought of them as poetry whith movement.

spoonme
02-08-2006, 02:55 AM
Spider webs are indeed things of beauty, especially when covered in frost. Although makes you stop and think when you fall into a bush in the summer you cant see all the webs you are falling into! Not that I fall into many bushes.

Spiders themselves on the other hand are just so not good.

Sorry Greg but Tarantulas are hairy and nasty and why make them black? So they can hide in the dark and jump on you and eat you or lay babies in your crevices.

I like Lizards though.

Greg WibblyWobbly
02-08-2006, 05:12 PM
Spider webs are indeed things of beauty, especially when covered in frost. Although makes you stop and think when you fall into a bush in the summer you cant see all the webs you are falling into! Not that I fall into many bushes.

Spiders themselves on the other hand are just so not good.

Sorry Greg but Tarantulas are hairy and nasty and why make them black? So they can hide in the dark and jump on you and eat you or lay babies in your crevices.

I like Lizards though.

:lol: Then I'll meet you half way with the lizards. I had at least 5 Iguanas.

spoonme
02-09-2006, 02:10 AM
An old work collegue had an Iguana but it kept getting its tail stuck between furniture and pulling it off! At least they grow back which is cool!

Greg WibblyWobbly
02-10-2006, 01:47 AM
An old work collegue had an Iguana but it kept getting its tail stuck between furniture and pulling it off! At least they grow back which is cool!

That is a neat feature to have !!