Vibidia duodecimguttata

Vibidia duodecimguttata is a species of ladybird beetle belonging to the family Coccinellidae, subfamily Coccinellinae.[1]

Vibidia duodecimguttata
Vibidia duodecimguttata, Dorsal view
Lateral view
Scientific classification
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V. duodecimguttata
Binomial name
Vibidia duodecimguttata
(Poda, 1761)

Distribution

This species is present in most of Europe, in the East Palearctic ecozone and in the Near East.[2]

Description

Vibidia duodecimguttata can reach a length of about 4 millimetres (0.16 in).[3] These beetles have an oval shaped body. The light brown antennae are quite long. The elytra have a slightly wider side edge. Their entire body has a light brown basic color on the upper and lower side, only the eyes are black. Elytra show 12 whitish spots, six on each elytron (hence the Latin word duodecimguttata, meaning twelve-spotted as if by drops). There is a whitish spot on both sides of the throat.

This species is rather similar to Calvia decemguttata and Halyzia sedecimguttata.

Biology

Adults can be encountered from April through September. This beetle is mycophagous,[4] mainly feeding on the powdery mildew fungus (Oidium), diseases affecting some trees (including oak and hazel).

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gollark: Also, some stuff was deliberately not isolated to the extent it should have been for security - mostly the process management, but possibly some filesystem IO.
gollark: Specifically, it relies on quirkiness in some aspects of Lua to work, but the quirks have more nested quirks attached which have problems.
gollark: Unfortunately, the sandboxing design has always been kind of flaky and inconsistent.
gollark: It incorporates a state-of-the-art-as-of-2018-or-so sandbox designed to stop unprivileged user code from being able to overwrite core OS files, ever.

References

  • A. G. Duff (2008). "Checklist of Beetles of the British Isles" (PDF). The Coleopterist. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 5, 2011. Retrieved February 13, 2011.


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