Lady beetles (Coccinellidae)


There are 64 genera and 364 species of Coccinellidae described from Australia (Australian Faunal Directory, 2025)

A guide to the beetles of Australia by G. Hangay & P. Zborowski (CSIRO Publishing, 2010) lists the family's characteristics:

  • body broadly ovate, highly convex, usually glabrous but some finely pubescent, 1-7 mm in length
  • yellow to black, often bicoloured or spotted, some with metallic shine
  • head deflexed, concealed from above by prothorax
  • antennae short, usually 11-segmented, including a 3-segmented club
  • tarsal formula [number of tarsal segments on front, middle and hind legs] 4-4-4, but appears to be 3-3-3 as the third segment is minute and hidden

Adults and larvae of most species are predators of aphids, mealybugs, scales or other small insects and mites. Exceptions are Epilachna species, which are herbivorous on Cucurbitaceae and Solanaceae, and Illeis galbula which feeds on powdery mildews (Australian beetles, Vol. 1, eds. J.F. Lawrence & A. Slipinski, CSIRO Publishing, 2013)


Lady beetles (Coccinellidae)

Announcements

16 Mar 2025

Hello NatureMaprs!Three new priority species lists of exotic freshwater and terrestrial invertebrates, and vertebrates in the ACT have been added to NatureMapr. Uploading records of these species to N...


Continue reading

NatureMapr now receives more records in NSW than ACT

NatureMapr Data Collector 6.2.1 update

Critical nature positive infrastructure update

IMPORTANT NatureMapr Data Collector 6.2.0 mobile app update

Discussion

DiBickers wrote:
14 Mar 2025
You’ve got a mix of Coccinella transversalis (Transverse Ladybird) & Hippodamia variegata (Spotted Amber Ladybird/Variegated Ladybird) in the same photo so I can only Verify it as Tribe Coccinellini which includes both of them😊

Coccinellini (Tribe)
DiBickers wrote:
2 Mar 2025
@KylieWaldon the shorter antennae look like Coccinellidae (Ladybird) rather than Chrysomelidae (Leaf Beetle).

Coccinellidae (family)
kasiaaus wrote:
24 Feb 2025
Thanks Kim :-)

Coccinellidae (family)
KimberiRP wrote:
24 Feb 2025
Might be a Rhizobius, but there are other possibilities, e.g. Scymnus. A safe identification would probably require examination of a specimen.

Coccinellidae (family)
kasiaaus wrote:
6 Feb 2025
Thank you Clare. It is good to know that you agree. I never trust my own judgement.

Unidentified Lady beetle (Coccinellidae)
804,181 sightings of 21,810 species from 13,600 contributors
CCA 3.0 | privacy
We acknowledge the Traditional Owners of this land and acknowledge their continuing connection to their culture. We pay our respects to their Elders past and present.