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As it turns out the two spot ladybird can have many morphs depending on your country or territory. This website has a few photos => http://everything-ladybug.com/ladybug-spots.html (not inclusive) The two spot is normally very small. What you are calling the 8 spot is really a morph of the 10 spot. Same family as the two spot but the easiest way to tell them a part is the bellies. The 10 spots are varied like the 2 spot but they always have yellow bellies. They can be found on similar trees, they both like sunny days, and they have all the other ladybird similarities.
The red and black beetle is called a ladybird beetle.
The two spotted ladybird beetle [Adalia bipunctata] is an example of a ladybug. It's the national insect of Latvia. It's second to the seven spotted ladybug [Coccinella septempunctata] in terms of Europe's most common ladybird beetles. Its upper body tends to show two black spots against a red background. But the reverse also may be found.
ladybirds live in all parts of the worldexcept Antarctica.
Stomp it with a boot. This will greatly harm it and may kill it. (this is a joke)
The common ladybird species's habitat is in the area where they do not die.
In front of you
the jungle
A ladybird in English is also known as a ladybug or ladybeetle, a small red spotted beetle best known from the child's rhyme "Ladybird, ladybird, fly away home." In Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet it is used by the nurse as a term of endearment. It was used in a similar way in Jonson's Cynthia's Revels, written shortly after.
it is their natural habitat
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habitat degradation