Ohio State Entomologists on the Hunt for Lady Beetles in Ohio
4/29/2013

WOOSTER,
Ohio – Ohio State University entomologists are trying to determine how many
“homegrown” lady beetles are in Ohio compared to the number of exotic lady
beetles in the Buckeye state and are asking Ohio farmers, gardeners and
homeowners for assistance.
Mary Gardiner, an
entomologist with Ohio State’s College of Food, Agricultural, and Environmental
Sciences, is conducting the Buckeye Lady Beetle Blitz as part of an effort to
recruit some 200 Ohio farmers, gardeners and homeowners to volunteer to collect
data on lady beetles in their farms, gardens and backyards and report their
findings to use for research efforts.
“Many types of
native lady beetles are declining in Ohio, while the introductions of exotic
non-native species of lady beetles are increasing,” said Gardiner, “Lady
beetles are a beneficial insect for gardeners and farmers because they provide
natural pest control.
“Therefore
it is relevant for Ohio farmers and gardeners to understand why these
populations are changing. This type of large-scale survey is one good way to
measure this.”
Lady beetles, which are
sometimes called ladybugs or lady bird beetles, are beneficial predators that
consume aphids, scale insects and many other pests that injure plants in
gardens, landscapes and agricultural settings, said Gardiner, who holds
appointments with Ohio State University Extension
and Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center, which are the outreach and research arms,
respectively, of the college.
Ohio's state insect is a
native species, the convergent lady beetle, Hippodamia
convergens Guerin.
Interested
volunteers can sign up for one of two, day-long training workshops to learn what
to look for, how to collect lady bugs and to receive a lady bug collection tool
kit, Gardiner said.
The
workshops are:
- May
20 from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. at the Nationwide and Ohio Farm Bureau 4-H Center, 2201 Fred
Taylor Drive, on Ohio State's Columbus campus.
- May
22 from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. in Fisher Auditorium at OARDC, 1680 Madison Ave., Wooster.
Both
workshops will feature information on why lady beetles are important to
agriculture, how to identify various lady beetle species and hands-on activities.
Registration for each workshop is $20 and includes lunch and the collection
tool kit, which consists of a lady bug identification sheet, a data collection sheet,
a tote bag and a yellow sticky trap to catch ladybugs.
An
online training session, which also costs $20, is available for those who can’t
come to either workshop, Gardiner said.
The
deadline to register for the workshops is May 15. For more information or to
register, contact Mary Griffith at 614-292-0618
or griffith.483@osu.edu.
Writers
Tracy Turner
614-688-1067
turner.490@osu.edu
Sources
Mary
Gardiner
330-263-3643
gardiner.29@osu.edu
Writer:
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