Tuesday, October 24, 2023

The unstoppable advance of harlequin ladybirds

 It's now a 14 years since I first saw a harlequin ladybird in Country Durham, and a decade since I first found one in Teesdale. Yesterday, in precisely the same location, there were hundreds, feeding on ivy nectar. This abundant supply of energy in autumn, coupled with their capacity to remain active in cold weather, must surely be important factors in the phenomenal success of this invasive species. 

Harlequin larvae seem to have an affinity with sycamore, perhaps because of the vast supply of sycamore aphids that they find on the leaves. At this location sycamore and ivy grow together, which might account for the population explosion, with dense ivy also providing a sheltered winter hibernation site.


There now seem to be two dominant morphs in this local population, one black with four large, ragged red spots and the other red with multiple black spots, which is more common. 



 This species is known to be a predator of our native ladybirds and can also transmit a parasite that kills other species. It also feeds extensively on eggs of butterflies and moths. Over the last two decades it has spread rapidly, from south east England to the Scottish border. It originated in central Asia but was introduced elsewhere in misconceived biological control programmes aimed at 'environmentally friendly' aphid control in greenhouse crops. Wherever it has been introduced it has escaped and has had a detrimental effect on native insect populations.


2 comments:

  1. Here in my part of the west London suburbs, Harlequin numbers have been far lower in recent seasons. They have now been known to be affected by some our parasitoids such as Dinocampus coccinellae. &-spots still seem the most common here.

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    1. That's interesting. I guess most invading species acquire a load of other species that feed on them or parasitise them as the years go by. I have noticed that quite a few harlequins here have distorted wing cases and I wonder if they have been parasitised. 7-spots and 2-spots had a good year here. Incidentally, I've seen quite of lot of Himalayan balsam plants here that has been heavily infested by a leaf miner, so maybe that might eventually have an impact on its abundance.

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