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Gardeners World blog

Wildlife

Harlequin ladybird

Posted by: Richard Jones, 06 February 2008, 11.29AM

Richard Jones The inaugural meeting of the Ivydale Primary School Natural History Club had its first show-and-tell session on Wednesday. The first ladybird of the year had made an appearance.It was crawling about in the back bedroom of one of the children and she proudly presented it in her flip-top jewellery box.

It was the harlequin ladybird, Harmonia axiridis. This was a 'new' species, first found in the UK, in Essex, in 2004. It sparked a spate of unhelpful and alarmist news stories about alien invaders wiping out our British ladybirds. The basis for these rumours was the observation that in the USA Harmonia axiridis out-competed native ladybirds, even eating their larvae, leading to some serious declines in local species.

Sure enough, H. axiridis is very large and aggressive, especially its larvae, which are twice the size of our common seven-spot ladybird larvae. But whether the harlequin will do serious ecological damage here remains to be seen. It coexists quite happily with seven-spot ladybirds and two-spot ladybirds in Japan, and since Japan has an oceanic-temperate climate like the UK rather than a continental climate like the USA, maybe the Japanese experience will be repeated here.

The harlequin ladybird has been deliberately transported around the world, and released into the wild well outside of its original Asian homeland. This is because it is a very useful biocontrol agent, attacking the many non-native aphids and other plant lice that have themselves been moved about the globe, albeit accidentally. Ironically, the seven-spot ladybird has also been accused of causing ecological havoc in the USA. It was deliberately released there many times since the 1950s before it finally became established and was still spreading when I found it in Florida in the 1990s.

H. axiridis was released as a biocontrol in the Low Countries, but no one is quite sure how it got to the UK. It could easily have been brought over in horticultural or other goods, or accidentally on cars or other vehicles travelling over from Europe.

This is actually the second Harmonia to arrive 'new' to Britain. The cream-streaked ladybird, H. quadripunctata appeared in the early 1940s, and although it too is a large and obvious beetle, its spread was slower and caused far less alarm. It seems to prefer pine aphids and I only found it in London last year, for the first time.

The harlequin ladybird is all over south London now, and although I saw lots in 2006, they were fewer and further between in 2007. Oh, and the seven- and two-spots were still very much in evidence.

Comments

  • Antonia

    06 February 2008, 01.44PM

    As you say, Richard, we have yet to see what effect the Harlequin has on our native species, but I always worry about our (i.e. humans') eagerness to introduce new species to combat other pests. I realise that the Harlequin was probably an accidentally-introduced creature which probably couldn't really be helped, but you mention many other creatures and instances of our messing around with nature and I wonder if we will ever learn!:-/

  • Roger Twigg

    07 February 2008, 07.50PM

    If you live near Wimbourne, Dorset, its worth going to Kingston Lacy (NT) to see carpets of snowdrops, by the paths and in the woods. It`s marvellous. Hellebores are out but not many of them.

  • harliquin ladybirds

    11 February 2008, 09.55AM

    In early autumn 2007 I saw thousands of these ladybirds, mostly on the paths, in Northdown House Gardens, Cliftonville, Kent. There were so many you couldn't avoid treading on them. I thought at the time it was a worrying sight after the bad press they had had and so I shall be interested to find out if they are goodies or badies.

  • John Innes Entomology

    11 February 2008, 07.10PM

    The harlequin has established in the UK very rapidly over the past 3 years and it's obviously here for the forseeable future. In Asia (its homeland), it has a preference for tree dwelling aphids, so perhaps we'll be thankful that those messy woolly beech tree aphids and sycamore aphids might now be kept under control!

  • amber

    22 February 2008, 01.49PM

    i love ladybirds

  • Ursula Benjafield

    25 February 2008, 12.20AM

    Found a harlequin ladybird today in my garden in south Essex - I think it is spectabilis. Now I have read the article, I don't know whether to kill it or release it back into the wild!

  • Helen Roy

    20 April 2008, 09.53AM

    I jointly coordinate the UK Harlequin Ladybird Survey with Peter Brown (NERC Centre for Ecology and Hydrology), Mike Majerus (Cambridge University) and Remy Ware (Cambridge University). We would be very pleased to hear of any harlequin ladybird sightings, particularly in the North of England and Scotland. Please visit our website:

    www.harlequin-survey.org

    We have received over 20000 records through this survey website largely thanks to the enthusiasm and commitment of the public.

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