Probably not. A trampoline is made up of a series of fine lines which the ladybird would find hard to walk on( or fall through them), let alone lay eggs.
hello, yes moths will lay there eggs in trampoline netting moths will try/and lay there eggs in any small hole wich seems stable enough to hold the eggs.
They're eggs :)
Because although the flies could not lay the eggs on the meat because they were to big to get through the netting they could lay them on the netting knowing that the maggots when they hatched would be small enough to fit through the netting holes to get to the meat therefore being able to nurish themselves.
3
until the male ladybird fertilizes up to all 550 eggs
Yes, it is called a pupa.
Ladybirds (ladybugs) lay eggs, they don't carry their young.
I would like to know too.. they are on our eavestrough and in the net of our trampoline
Ladybirds lay eggs and do not become pregnant (they do not give birth to live young).
lady birds lay their eggs all through the year particularly in spring but they don't lay their eggs near the end of summer due to normally eating and dieing about this time.
Don't know about eating, but I've seen about 12 eggs arranged in two rows - so they do move.
Have you tried a fine netting? My MIL bought some invisible clear plastic netting and laid it down over the top of her pond. Stopped the birds but didn't stop the raccoons. She stopped the raccoons with a motion detection light.