In the last three years that I have been looking for ladybirds I have learnt that the best places to find them are on gravestones in winter and in small Scots pine trees in the rest of the year. Some ladybirds are generalists - found in many different habitats - but others are conifer specialists and Scots pine seems to be most favoured. I have often noticed a group of small self-seeded pines close to the A189 north of Cramlington as I have driven past and I eventually got round to visiting them a few days ago. It's a pretty unprepossessing spot inside a large traffic interchange and apart from the pines it mostly scrub and litter. But the trees are what attract the ladybirds and they don't mind the surroundings. This is the habitat,
It was immediately apparent that there were ladybirds everywhere. Every branch of every tree seemed to have a 7-spot Ladybird and there were Pine Ladybirds on almost every tree. Altogether I found 10 species in a place with no previous records (because no-one had looked). There were lots of great pine aphids as well which is presumably why the ladybirds were there.
The species I found were:
10-spot Ladybird. Often in deciduous trees but can turn up anywhere. I found two colour forms - decempunctata and decempustulata.
Striped Ladybird. Perhaps the prettiest of all and mostly found in or close to Scots pine. Usually hard to find but this was the most I have seen in one place.
It was absorbing to find so many species in one small spot. I expect it will be worth another visit in a few weeks time when there will be larvae to look for as well.













fantastic Chris thank you.
ReplyDeleteWe are looking forward to feedback from your next Ladybird survey at out patch JL
Evening Chris from a not so sunny Scarborough. Do you think that Striped Ladybird is a species of the North? We search and never find them in our area We also search the York area and none are found there there Cheers Allan
ReplyDeleteHello Allan. Looking at the records on iRecord it does seem to be a North East specialty, something I hadn't realised, perhaps because of its preference for Scots pines. This was by far the most I have seen in one place. It is usually just one or two. If it works, here is a link to the map. https://photos.google.com/photo/AF1QipOoGLiC28YOqfAH3uW2z5AAnAFONopjcuWlFReW
DeleteThis is a bit of James Common's chapter in the new Ladybirds of North East England. It seems there are more records from around Newcastle, possibly because that's where most of the recorders are. James does say it is probably under-reported. It is interesting that it isn't recorded in Jesmond Old Cemetery but the only pine there is a Black Pine.
Deletehttps://photos.google.com/photo/AF1QipPbIeXuVCoU0FdRKDVckLWcnx9pe4J7wrM4D6_D
Just brilliant!
ReplyDeleteA fantastic find Chris !
ReplyDelete