Ladybugs or orange beetles are insects that belong to the beetle order. “Ladybug” is the common name for small insects with a round, drum-shaped body, covered with armor, and black dots on the surface of the wings (some species Not available).
Ladybug’s English name is Coccinellidae. There are about 5,000 types in the world today, most of them have round bodies with 6 small, short legs, each leg has 4 segments.
Ladybugs (orange beetles) are quite small in size, only 0.1 – 1 cm long depending on the species. They have small heads, often with 2 white streaks and 2 antennae far apart. Males are on average smaller in size than females.
Ladybug is the common name for small insects with a round, drum-shaped body, covered with armor, and black dots on the wings. People classify ladybugs depending on the number of dots and frame morphology.
The most commonly seen ladybug is the “7-star” ladybug. They are called that because their orange-yellow shell has seven black spots. Each wing has three nodes, and one node is at the junction between the two wings. This is also the largest species of ladybug and an admirable “hunter”.
Ladybugs eat many things, but their main food is rice aphids. An average ladybug can eat more than 100 aphids a day. In the spring, rice aphids hatch from their eggs, and ladybugs also “wake up” after wintering, so they have an abundant amount of food.