Acually, scientists found out, that when you hold a lady bug it lays eggs in your skin and when they hatch they burrow in your skin really deep and they suck your blood. SO NO THEY ARE NOT HARMLESS.
They are completely harmless, They are in fact very rare ladybugs.
no. their mandibles are too narrow to bite. they only bite out of protection and they are as harmless as can be. :-)
No, orange ladybugs such as the Asian or Japanese lady beetle [Harmonia axyridis] aren't poisonous. But they aren't tasty either. Generally, orange or red coloring warns nature that a plant or animal doesn't have a pleasant taste.No, the orange ladybugs are harmless. The red ladybugs are not poisionous, but they do bite if you bother them.
NO, ladybugs are not poisonous to humans, they can affect small animals but they are not poisonous to humans
Ladybugs are not poisonous. Sometime when ingest the can have toxic like effects on predators. This will teach predators to refrain from eating them similar to the foul taste of a monarch butterfly.
It actually dosent, but it eats aphids and other critters that eat your garden.Its color warns other animals not to eat it, but it actually is harmless.
Yellow ladybugs, like most ladybugs, are not poisonous to touch. While they can secrete a fluid that has a strong odor and may cause mild irritation if ingested or if it comes into contact with sensitive skin, they are generally harmless to humans. Their bright coloration serves as a warning to predators that they may be unpalatable, but they do not pose a significant threat to people.
It is not at all poisonous, some lacewings feed on aphids and other small insects, so like ladybugs they may pinch a little.
what are ladybugs lifecycle
Ladybugs get around by flying and crawling. Ladybugs have to be decent flyers in order to escape from their predators, otherwise they would die.
no but some kinds of ladybugs do
Yes, ladybugs will sometimes eat the larvae and pupae of their own kind.