Last weekend, I took some shots of Multicolored Asian Lady Beetles (Harmonia axyridia) in the larval and pupal stage and discussed the phases of ladybug development in a post called Baby Ladybugs. Yesterday, I returned to see if I could find any fully developed ladybugs that had been in pupae the last time I encountered them. (Yes, I realize I would not be able to recognize them individually, but it’s nice to imagine that we’re gradually getting to know each other.)
So, what happened? I left the shoot thinking that I had not seen any adult ladybugs, but when I looked at some of the photos on my computer of different pupae, I was uncertain. Right outside of an empty pupa shell in one of the photos is something that looks like an adult ladybug, if I squint my eyes, tilt my head, and use a little imagination. What do you think?
If you haven’t been following this story, let me catch you up with a couple of photos. (I feel like I’m doing an intro for a new television series, Lifestyles of the Ladybug.) Ladybugs start out as eggs and them become larvae. As they grow, they molt several times and each time they develop a new exoskeleton. Yesterday, I saw quite a few discarded skins that, at first glance, looked a lot like the larvae themselves. Here is what a ladybug larva looks like in a later phase of development. (I took some new shots of the larvae and pupae yesterday.) They are not as cute in this stage as they will become as adult ladybugs.
Once they are fully grown, the larvae enter into a pupal stage, somewhat akin to the cocoons into which caterpillars develop into butterflies. The pupae look a little bit like ladybugs themselves and are attached to leaves. While they are in this phase, the metamorphosis takes place in which they turn into ladybugs. Here is my favorite shots of a ladybug pupa.
After about five days, a ladybug emerges from the pupa. According to ladybug-life-cycle.com, “When the metamorphosis is complete, the skin of the larvae will split open and the full grown ladybug will emerge, but it still won’t look like the ladybug that you know so well. It will look soft and pink or very pale for a couple of hours until its shell becomes hard.”
Was I really lucky enough to catch the ladybug just after it had emerged from the pupa? My response is a firm, “Maybe,” but others with more experience may be able to respond more definitively. Here is one last photo of the possible new ladybug, from a slightly different angle than the first photo, to help your deliberations.
© Michael Q. Powell. All rights reserved.




I can’t see that it looks like an adult lady bug but who knows what it looked like after an hour or so. this is interesting stuff-i never knew that lady bugs went through so many different phases.
I wonder if this particular ladybug got stuck in its pupal case and didn’t make it out all the way. The reason I say this is that your photo shows fully pigmented wing covers (or what look like wing covers) of the emerging adult. When I observed the ladybugs emerging from their pupal case, the wing covers were a creamy orange color with no spots. I’ll plug my slideshow of the emergence here, if you don’t mind. http://bybio.wordpress.com/2012/09/20/ladybug-metamorphosis/
Wow. The slide show is really cool. I see I had “liked” it already, but that just means my retention is not what it used to be. I’m still not sure what I have, but I’m beginning to doubt that it’s an adult ladybug. I may return today and see what I find
Thanks for sharing “Lifestyles of the Ladybug”, I didn’t know this before! Great pictures. 🙂
Thanks. I’m confident about the larva and pupa, but my photos for today are beginning to look more and more like they are not of an almost adult ladybug. Taking the photo is often simpler than identification.
That’s true! Birds are easier than bugs.. 😉
It keeps you coming back. You learn and then we will. Thanks
This is fantastic! I did not know these stages, but I have seen them on my plants🥰