14-spot ladybird (Propylea quatuordecimpunctata)

Beetle Ladybird 





23 June 2020
20 May  2019*

The 14-spot Ladybird
is a medium-sized ladybird found in a wide variety of habitats, particularly grassland, woodland edges, towns and gardens. Both adults and larvae feed on aphids, making them a friend in the garden. The 14-spot Ladybird has a long hibernation period, emerging as late as May to breed. The lifecycle of a ladybird consists of four phases: the egg; the larval stage, during which the larva undergoes a series of moults; the pupa, in which the larva develops into an adult; and the adult phase, during which the female lays eggs in batches of up to 40.

How to identify

The 14-spot Ladybird is bright yellow with up to 14 rectangular black spots on the wing cases; these spots are variable in shape and may become fused to create a chequered pattern. It can be distinguished from the smaller, but similar, 22-spot Ladybird by its more rectangular, merging spots.


The 14-spot Ladybird is one of just three yellow ladybirds that inhabit the UK. Its bright colouration is a warning to predators that it is distasteful, although some birds may still have a go at eating it.
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23 June 2020


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