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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsCornell's Lost Ladybug Project
http://www.truth-out.org/three-cheers-nine-spotted-ladybug/1324914219
Three Cheers for the Nine-Spotted Ladybug
Great news, people! A colony of nine-spotted ladybugs has been discovered in Amagansett, New York.
This uplifting story is a rich organic mixture of state pride and nature's resilience, along with America's scientific pluck, teamwork, serendipity, and bug love. In today's hard times, we need this.
-snip-
A benevolent and delightful creature, it's beloved by everyone from children to farmers so beloved that it became New York State's official insect. Sadly (and somewhat embarrassingly), however, this critter had vanished entirely from the state that honored it, with the last recorded sighting in New York 29 years ago. Apparently a victim of competition from imported Asian and European ladybug species, as well as pesticides and habitat loss, only 90 of the native nine-spotteds have been seen in all of North America in the past decade.
-snip-
Then, this summer, lo and behold, a volunteer spotted one sitting pretty as you please in a patch of sunflowers on an organic farm in Amagansett. About 20 more were subsequently found on the farm amidst rows of carrots, beans, and flowers enough for the project to establish a reproducing colony, while also building confidence that more will be discovered.
To keep up with this bit of good bug news, go to www.lostladybug.org.
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really good news - go ladybugs! we need you.
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Cornell's Lost Ladybug Project (Original Post)
ensho
Dec 2011
OP
Overseas
(12,121 posts)1. K&R. Glad to hear it.
geckosfeet
(9,644 posts)2. I remember seeing them often as a child.
It was considered good luck when one landed on you.
As I recall, their color was more red than the other species, which tend to be more orange.
ensho
(11,957 posts)3. it was the same when I was a kid - lucky if one landed on you
I always welcomed them in my gardens
fasttense
(17,301 posts)4. Notice it was found on an organic farm!
We grow naturally here in TN and a host of uncommon bugs thrive throughout our farm. If we could sell bugs, we could corner the market.
We sell at a local Farmer's Market and I once sold flowers because of the bugs on it.
It was a moth that had markings and colors of a bumble bee. In fact I thought it was a bumble bee at first glance. But a customer noticed it hovering around my flowers and said though it was not endangered, it was rare. So, she bought a couple of my naturally grown wild flower boquets.
Who can say they sold produce because of the bugs on it?
xchrom
(108,903 posts)5. du rec. nt