Friday, July 03, 2009

Posted by PicasaCan anyone identify this for Judi Gardner?, they had several appear on their green wheelie bin, and have never seen them before.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

I think that it is a female firefly.
If you go back and have a look now.. at 00.09.. she should be shinning !
A very rare and beautiful sight .

sholto said...

Pretty sure it is the larvae of a Harlequin Ladybird (Harmonia axyridis). This is a foreign species that is a voracious feeder and used for biologoical pest control in crops. It is also displacing native species of ladybird and other native insects - not so good... Native larvae species do not have this orange 'box' marking - they still can be black but have orange spots on the flanks. You can register this sighting on this website:

http://www.harlequin-survey.org/recognition_and_distinction.htm

Pete Douglas, Scilly expat

Chris Cardwell said...

Ladybird Larvae picture if it works

[URL=http://picfront.de/d/ao32G5Rhbzg/LadybirdLarvae.jpg][IMG]http://www8.picfront.org/picture/ao32G5Rhbzg/img/LadybirdLarvae.jpg[/IMG][/URL]

Chris Tunbridge Wells Kent

Chris Cardwell said...

Try this link
http://picfront.de/d/ao32G5Rhbzg/LadybirdLarvae.jpg

Chris

Giles said...

Definitley a forth instar harlequin ladybird larvae. It's an invasive species originally from Japan. Now displacing native species such as the 7-spot. Interesting to see that it has made it to the Isles of Scilly.
Oliver Ashford