If you mean ladybirds, the red beetle with the black spots, they will be killed by insecticides. They however eat aphids so are beneficial and remove the need for spraying for greenfly.
Insecticides only work well for a few years because the insects undergo natural selection. The insects that are better adapted to survive the insecticide will reproduce and pass down their genes to the next generation and the adapted generation of insects will be unaffected by the insecticides.
they love trees
you're mom!!!!!!!!!!! heehee
Yes, they will kill spiders too.
Who says they are? They have been proven to work.
well it moves the tides, so if your work involved the sea it would be affected.
You have to look under a microscope to see the eyes on a ladybug, but they are there, and they work just fine
maybe affected if not regular or based in that departmental work
Your claim may very well be affected.
very bad it did not go so well in the olden time even in the summer they might of had bad verythey had to work at many different kind of places
Natural enemies, sticky traps, and systemic insecticides are examples of pest controls which work. For example, the pesticide that does what it intends to do will drop pest populations to manageable levels (such as just enough aphids to keep ladybugs fed but not enough to threaten plant appearance or well-being) since treatments which aim to exterminate (such as the gypsy moth wars) generally have side effects and result in strengthened immunity by determinedly aggressive, invasive pests.
Transportation affected Atlanta by taking people to work or other places.