Backyard and Beyond

Starting out from Brooklyn, an amateur naturalist explores our world.

As John Burroughs said, “The place to observe nature is where you are.”

Spotted on Governor’s


You can put a lady bug/lady beetle in the freezer for a couple of minutes (no more than 6) to slow it down for photography, but when you’re in the field that’s not much of an option. Especially since I’m not collecting.

I found this one on Governor’s Island on Sunday. It was in the grass of the moat of Fort Jay. I let it crawl up on my finger and palm and snapped this image before it flew off. After checking some images, I thought it might be the elusive Nine-spotted lady, once abundant but now very rare on the East coast. This was an exciting thought, and I sent this image to the Lost Ladybug Project at Cornell. But on further examination, what I took for the forth spots on each elytra aren’t. (I await my correction from the LLP.) I guess that those bumps might be bits of wing, which is also what you can see at the rear.

So that would make this the Nine-spotted’s relative, the Seven-spotted, Coccinella septempuntata, an invasive introduced from Europe in 1956. A lesson in observation: it is better to look rather than photograph.

3 responses to “Spotted on Governor’s”

  1. Or both look AND photograph! The permanent record a photograph provides is invaluable for “checking some images.” And wildlife photography is an art in itself. It can’t be done effectively without looking, and seeing. As you do.

  2. What, no glitter on this beetle? Did she miss out on the glitter pool? I didn’t go, but I’m seeing the glitter trails into Boroughs proper.

  3. I had no idea about the lost ladybug project. Once again, great photo and great ideas here.

    I’m off in search of a nine-spotted lady.

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