Lee Royer
Frederick County Master Gardener
Once upon a time to find a
ladybug in your house was a sign of good luck. These
days, ladybugs are invading more and more homes each
year and few of us count our selves lucky when this
happens.
Ladybugs are actually beetles
and, as many people know, are beneficial insects that
feast on plant lice called aphids and other soft body
insect pests that destroy our garden plants and field
crops. Even small children quickly learn to recognize
the cheery round shape, bright red or orange color and
black spots of ladybugs. Europeans during the Middle
Ages dubbed them "The Beetles of Our Lady" after they
were discovered to rid grapevines and other crops of
pests, hence ladybugs. Entomologists know them as the
Family Coccinellidae and there are many species
worldwide, about 200 residing in North America.
Your house invading nuisance
species is most likely to be the Multicolored Asian
Lady Beetle (Harmonia axyridis) imported and released
in mass as a biological control agent since at least
1916 by farmers and government agencies. Not until the
late 1980s were established colonies documented by
scientists in Georgia and Mississippi. Since then they
have been found in large numbers across most of the US
and as far north as Ontario, Canada. It is also
possible that these first established populations were
accidentally introduced from commercial activity at
the port of New Orleans. However they got here, they
are here to stay as long as the food lasts.
Ladybugs get through the
winter by hibernating in adult form. Many species in
the wild choose rock crevices for this purpose but a
house offers even more opportunities to hide behind
wood or plastic siding. Since they don't become active
unless the temperatures go above 55, during a cold
winter they might stay quietly hidden behind your
siding until the weather warms up in the spring.
During warm spells the outside of our homes easily
heat up to 55 degrees, and the ladybugs break
hibernation to search for aphid infested plants on
which to lay their eggs. So warmer winters equal more
chances for ladybugs to break hibernation and go
searching in your house for aphids.
Thank goodness ladybugs do not
reproduce indoors like fleas or roaches, nor do they
sting, bite so as you'd notice, carry diseases or feed
on anything other than soft bodied insects. They do
secrete a stinky yellowish liquid that makes them
taste bad to predators such as birds and which stains
surfaces and fabrics, especially when they congregate
in large numbers. And who enjoys the crunch of
stepping on a ladybug in the middle of the night?
Most commercially available
spray insecticides will kill ladybugs, however you are
replacing a relatively benign problem with a
definitely hazardous material and dead or alive you
will need to pick them up to remove them. If you want
to change the problem into a bonus for your garden,
try this method: attach with tape or heavy rubber band
a knee high nylon stocking to the end of your vacuum
cleaner hose, stuffing it inside the hose. Then vacuum
the bugs into the stocking net you created. When
finished bug catching, close the open end of the
stocking with a twist tie or knot and put them in a
dark, colder than 55 degree, but not freezing place
until spring when you can then release them into your
garden. The going rate for ladybugs is around $7.50
plus postage for 2,000 so you can calculate your
savings.
That sticky stinky yellow
liquid also contains chemical clues that attract the
bugs back to the same places each winter so unless you
want to continue collecting ladybugs year after year,
you will need to take the offense by making sure your
home is well caulked and all bug size crevices are
filled as well as making sure your window and door
screens are in good condition. Exterminating them
completely is probably near impossible given the small
size of ladybugs but it's worth a try for large
infestations.
Read other articles on birds, wildlife & beneficial insects
Read other articles by Lee Royer