It is a lady bird with Dark green shell and orange spots. It's scintific name is Orcus australasiae
They can live any where because we are studying the orange betel and it can live any where except Antarctica and Arctic because it is to cold for them
China
Stomp it with a boot. This will greatly harm it and may kill it. (this is a joke)
Well, the predators are ants, elephants,tigers and whales. (scientifically speaking) they are well known to be eaten by dogs
Ladybird Sideshow Live at the Orange Lounge was created in 2004.
The red and black beetle is called a ladybird beetle.
Ladybird larva are brilliantly colored, often blue, with stripes of orange or black.
that orange ladybird, that you are always scared off.
In Orange Puffle Land
A orange spotted gecko is a omnivore. It eats plants and meat.
Orange ladybugs belong to the Coccinellidae family and are classified under the order Coleoptera. They are commonly known as ladybugs or ladybirds and are characterized by their round bodies and bright orange or red coloration with black spots.
Yes, it is possible to find a sixteen-spotted ladybug. Specifically, the scientific name is Halyzia sedecimguttata. The common name is the orange ladybird. The scientific name pays tribute to the beetle's 16 creamy white spots while the common name honors this ladybug's orange color.
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.
If it is parallel orange lines that are the spikes then it sounds like it is ladybird larvae.