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The world of insects. The larva of ladybug

Who does not remember the little ladybird, the sun, the bug? That's how we in our childhood called cute bugs in the "red livery" in the black dot. Ladybugs in different cultures were symbols of many things, but more often than not - good luck.

Ladybug is a small bug that consists of 3 parts: head, chest and abdomen. There are wings and fenders, and six short legs attached to the chest. The larva of the ladybug is absolutely different from her adult congeners. Looking at her, you might think that this is a completely different kind of insect. There are many different ladybirds in the world. They have different sizes, colors and structure. Their length is from 1 to 10 mm, depending on the species of ladybird. Females are larger than males.

Laying eggs and the appearance of larvae

Usually the female lays up to 1000 eggs for several months. Place of masonry - the bottom side of the sheet, from 10 to 50 eggs for each. And at the same time, colonies of aphids are formed, which are food for adults and emerging offspring. After a week and a half (all depends on the natural conditions) small caterpillars of dark color appear from the eggs. The larva of the ladybird eats the remains of the shell of the egg, from which she just left. In order to properly refresh and improve survival in the first days of existence, it consumes nearby "houses of relatives". It is believed that each masonry has unfertilized eggs, and they are eaten by the larva of the ladybug. During its vegetative period, it "molts," eats, grows, pupates and turns into an adult. Usually the cycle lasts a month and a half.

What does the ladybird's larva look like?

Puping, the larva does not create a cocoon, but remains unprotected and it seems that it is just non-living. But in this period there is a transformation, the most difficult process of transformation into an adult insect is a ladybird. It is an unusual species and far from as charming as an adult. The larva changes its cover four times. This is because her skin does not grow with her. Therefore, it drops the old, and under it the larva of the ladybug has a new one. The baby grows, adds weight, there are specks and tubercles, and still transparent legs. But the larva is blind and yet she continues to eat, examining one plant after another, finding colonies of aphids. Time passes, and the larva of the Ladybird, added in weight and grown-up, begins to prepare for pupation. The photo of this pupa, attached with its tail to the plant, is a great find for fans of photo hunting.

Migratory insects

The newly born young people live until autumn on their land, destroying aphids, small insects, mites, and then fly to the winter in the mountains. It would seem that they do there among the stones and without food? But the ladybirds are not flying to feed, but to overwinter in the cracks, crevices, stones, and, numb, stay there until the spring. And when the sun starts to heat, the ladybugs will return to their land to repeat the life cycle.

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