If ladybugs move into your house this fall, make them
welcome
During the warm months of the year, ladybugs are like adorable,
bright-colored lapel pins. They land on us, accessorize our clothing in
brilliant red or orange with stylish black spots, and are delightful to have
around. Several cultures even think of ladybu
gs as good luck charms for
anything from marriage to childbirth to the weather to a good harvest.
Then fall arrives and the ladybugs need to find warmth, which is
most available inside people’s homes – where they often descend in large
numbers. Suddenly they’re not as cute to many people as they seemed outdoors.
But Jessica Ware, an insect expert and assistant professor of biology at
Rutgers University-Newark, says having ladybugs indoors serves a very useful
purpose, and humans should welcome their temporary houseguests.
Because ladybird beetles (which Ware points out is the insects’
actual name) gather in big groups – mutually attracted by each other’s
pheromones – they’ll often enter just one home in a neighborhood and skip the
others. Ware says there is no good way of predicting which house they will want
– except that they tend to like their environment moist and warm – much as we
humans do.
If they’re already in your house, says Ware, you’ve probably got
them ‘til spring. Many will die over the winter, and those that don’t will go
back outside when the weather warms up. That is when Ware says you will have
performed a true public service by hosting them through the cold months.
They’ll devour aphids in your garden – if you have one – as they did all winter
for your houseplants. They also will go after aphids in your neighbors’
gardens – as well as on farms where summer fruits and vegetables grow.
“Aphids are one of the most common pests in people’s flower
gardens and they especially like to destroy ornamental plants like tulips and
daffodils and the beautiful things you see in spring,” says Ware. “Aphids
basically suck the juice out of the plants and kill them, and they can breed by
the thousands in a matter of days. But not if ladybirds get them first.”
Continue reading at Rutgers
University.