Loading...
The Rural Voice, 2002-05, Page 40They're a boon to crop protection but a plague for owners of older homes who have been invaded by these aliens from south of the border By Bonnie Gropp They may be a boon to soybean growers, but for homeowners the influx of ladybugs has become somewhat of a nuisance. While much has been said of the fact that the lady beetles we're seeing now are not 'real' ladybugs, according to University of Guelph Professor of environmental biology Steve Marshall there are 500 species in North America which are members of the one family. "The ones we are seeing now, the multi -coloured Asian lady beetle were deliberately introduced into the United States for the control of aphids in 1991," said Marshall However. there was no permit ever granted for their release into Canada. Through one way or another however, the Asian lady beetle found its way here with the first being recorded in 1994. Marshall predicted, accurately it would seem, that the number of beetles would soon be abundant. "Last year there was an enormous population explosion," said Marshall, a fact that has raised some concerns. "Any time you introduce exotic predators without considering the impact on native species there is a concern." Marshall talks of upsetting bio -diversity and notes that the spotted lady beetle, which is native to Ontario, has been eliminated. Other species are now rare. What has prompted the growth in population is quite likely the reason the lady beetles found their way here. Information from the Ministry of Natural Resources states that the population grows in response to an increase in c their prey. o OOR VOTE FOR THE 10 MOST IRRITATING LADIES (This poll carries a 97 per cent margin of error, 19 times out of 20. depending on who is viewing it) 36 THE RURAL VOICE a Lady beetles z are the most a beneficial of all insects because they 8 prey upon 8