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Sunday, May 25, 2008

Ladybug: Check out the Handbook of Nature Study



I took this photo the other day in the garden and I posted it here on my blog. Someone identified it as a ladybug larva. (Thanks Margie!) I checked it out and they were right. The amazing part about it to me is that it is so big compared to the adult ladybug.


Ladybug larva

I looked it up in the Handbook of Nature Study and sure enough there is an illustration on page 364 that really shows the differences between the larva, the pupa, and the adult.
"...for they do not in the least resemble her; they are neither rolypoly nor shiny, bur are long and segmented and velvety, with six queer, short legs that look and act as if they were whittled out of wood; they seem only efficient for clinging around a stem....the absorbing business of the larva is to crawl around on plants and chew up the foolish aphids or the scale insects."
Handbook of Nature Study page 365

Here is another photo I took the other day and I sort of thought it was a ladybug but it wasn't quite the same as I had seen before.


Here is my favorite all-time photo of a ladybug that I took a few years ago. This still makes me smile every time that I look at it.

I highly recommend reading the section on ladybugs on pages 364-366. If you read it now, the next time you see a ladybug you will be ready to make some observations with your children. This is the great value I find in using the Handbook of Nature Study. After just a few minutes spent reading this section on ladbybugs, I feel like now I can relate some interesting little tidbits quite naturally to my boys when we next happen upon this insect in our garden.

Go look for some ladybugs!

5 comments:

  1. In all my years of noticing ladybugs, I have never noticed one of these queer little things. Thank you for sharing your photo and information!

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  2. I have never seen (that I know of) a ladybug larva...very cool. And I would have had no clue what that thing was. Thanks for posting that!
    ~Becky

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  3. You always inspire me. Thanks!

    jen

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  4. I will sit down with my book tonight. Thanks. I, too, have never seen one of these larvae. It seems so strange because Lady Bugs are so common.
    Jenn

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  5. I read your blog on occasion to see what wonderful things you are doing out in nature. I especially want to thank you for sharing the ladybug larvae post. I came upon this insect and couldn't figure out what type of bug it was! Now, I know. My children will be thrilled to know what type of bug we have found. Thank you!

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