Ladybirds
are really small, spotted beetles with a rounded body shaped like half a pea. The
polka-dotted ladybird, or ladybug, is really small beetle with a round body shaped
like half a pea.
The most
familiar ladybirds are shiny red with black spots. But some are black with red
spots. Still others are
yellow with black of red spots.
These
gaily colored insects live in a orchards, gardens, and fields, where they eat
great number of aphids and other plant-harming bugs.
In
order times, farmers burning off their fields fretted about harming the helpful
ladybird, giving rise to the children’s verse: “ladybird, ladybird, fly away
home. Your house is on fire
and your children are gone.”
To
“fly away home,” a ladybird first raises its hard wing covers and then unfolds
it flying wings. The
lady bird beetle got its name during the Middle Ages, when the insect was
associated with the Virgin Mary by such names as creatures of Our Lady and
Animals of the Virgin.-Dick Rogers
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