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Bug of the Week is written by "The Bug Guy," Michael J. Raupp, Professor of Entomology at the University of Maryland.

Bugs in Orange and Black, Part II: Halloween Lady Beetle - the Multicolored Asian Lady Beetle, Harmonia axyridis

 

With the remains of the last victim clenched in her jaws, a multicolored Asian lady beetle is ready to find her next meal.

 

In a previous episode, we met a lovely ermine moth dressed in orange and black just in time for Halloween. This week we meet a harlequin in the beetle clan. On a bright, sunny afternoon last week, my daughter’s house was pelted with lady beetles suffering from the delusion that her home was their home. This petite invasion is underway throughout our area as the multicolored Asian lady beetle (a.k.a. the Halloween lady beetle) seeks winter refuge in homes, schools, and office buildings.

A single Harmonia larva may consume more than 1000 aphids during its development.

Harmonia axyridis is a prodigious killer of aphids and other nasty pests in our gardens. In one grove of barberries, I witnessed the annihilation of a booming aphid population. The dazzling lady beetle adults and their alligator-like spawn so completely decimated their prey that I could not find a single living aphid a couple of weeks after they discovered the aphid patch. Harmonia adults have been reported to consume more than 250 aphids each day, and the larvae may each eat more than 1,200 during their development. In addition to eating large numbers of aphids, they devour other soft bodied pests including adelgids, scales insects, and psyllids. Like many predators, they also eat each other.

  

During her lifetime, a single female lady beetle may lay hundreds of eggs.

As early as 1916, deliberate attempts were made to introduce Harmonia axyridis into the United States from their aboriginal home in Asia. Multiple efforts to introduce this fierce little predator followed and we are not exactly sure when this lady beetle established in the US, but by the mid-1980s it was firmly entrenched in the southern United States. By 1993, it was reported in several Mid-Atlantic States, including Maryland. It is now distributed from Florida to Washington State. 

 

 

Harmonia larvae look like tiny alligators.

I have heard reports of people being “bitten” by ladybugs and confess that I have gotten a small nip from Harmonia every now and then. A recent study discovered that these tiny awesome predators, particularly smaller native species of lady beetles, do indeed bite humans and in some cases drink mammalian blood under laboratory conditions. Yikes! Before you duck and cover your jugulars from these minute vampires, take solace in the knowledge that Harmonia exhibited no tendency to drink blood. There is, however, one caution you might heed as you deal with home-invading lady beetles.  When handled or disturbed, they can release a smelly, bitter secretion that may leave a faint yellow stain on your skin, wall, or curtain. This neat trick is called reflex bleeding and it is their way of delivering a nasty surprise to a would-be predator.

Whether it’s behind a green shutter or under loose window trim, Asian lady beetles are in a hurry to find winter refuge.

Why the fascination with invading our homes? Are these ladybugs simply nosey or are we next on the menu now that the aphids are gone? As winter approaches, Harmonia seek protected locations to overwinter, including crevices and cracks in rocky cliffs and outcroppings, to escape the ravages of winter. Throughout the cities and suburbs of Washington and Baltimore rocky cliffs are scarce, but homes and buildings are plentiful. Like the brown marmorated stink bug we met in previous episodes, this is the time that Harmonia fly to our homes and attempt to find refuge. Any cracks around windows, breaks in stone foundations, unscreened vents in the attic, or gaps in facer boards can allow entry to your home. Once inside, the beetles settle-in and become dormant for the winter, but on warm days in the late winter and early spring they may become active and find their way to sunny windows, where they attempt to escape.

Asian multicolored lady beetles often share overwintering sites with another invader from Asia, the brown marmorated stink bug.

To prevent these and other invaders from entering your home, repair screens on your windows and vents, caulk your foundation, seal air conditioners, and eliminate points of entry to your home. Not only will this keep invaders out, but it will also help keep warm air in and reduce your heating costs. If you find the beetles a problem indoors, carefully sweep or vacuum them up and release them in a protected spot outdoors, such as a tool shed.

One of the real delights of the season is to visit nearby summits such as the rocky crags of Old Rag Mountain in Virginia or Weverton Cliffs and Sugarloaf Mountain in Maryland, to witness thousands of multicolored Asian lady beetles gathering on the sunlit cliffs for one last bask before turning in for the winter. You better hurry. The appearance of large groups of multicolored Asian lady beetles in the fall is a sure sign that Old Man Winter is just around the corner.



References

Bug of the Week thanks Erin, Jeff, Eloise, and Abby who provided the inspiration for this episode. Doug Inkley provided the marvelous image of lady beetles and stink bugs in the attic. The interesting study by Sam Ramsey and John Losey entitled “Why is Harmonia axyridis the culprit in coccinellid biting incidents? “ was consulted to prepare this article.

To learn more about Multicolored Asian Lady Beetle, please visit the following web site:

http://idl.entomology.cornell.edu/files/2013/11/Multicolored-Asian-Lady-Beetle-290n55z.pdf