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Ladybug
Time Mountain News - January 1999 by Robert Smith |
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| This issue of Mountain News honors an attractive but
not-so-innocent littlesojourner on Mt. Diablo. Ladybugs
inhabit many places in the world. Not bugs at all, they
are VW-shaped beetles with hard, protective outer wings.
Their coloration varies from region to region, but many
ladybug species are predominantly red-orange with black
spots. There are several species in California, the most
prominent of which on Mt. Diablo is Hippodamia
convergens. These colorful, insects appear each
winter by the hundreds of thousands on Mt. Diablo. Guided
by some inner map, they mass in the same sheltered
ravines year after year, dispersing in the spring to
search for food. However winsome they may seem to humans,
ladybugs are rapacious armored tanks to their favorite
prey, aphids. Because of the beneficial role they played
in medieval Europe by ridding gardens and vineyards of
aphids, they were reverentially dubbed Our
Lady beetles, after the Virgin Mary; hence the
derivation ladybug (ladybird in Britain).
Look for swarms of adult ladybugs in dark, shaded
ravines, especially on the Falls Trail. |
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