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Biting Asian Ladybugs Ottawa

Written By Tim Robin on Saturday 15 October 2011 | 01:42

Biting Asian Ladybugs Ottawa- There are reports of swarms of the multicoloured Asian ladybug, an insect known to bite, in Ottawa's southern limits and making their way into more urban areas. Carleton University entomologist Jeff Dawson said in the fall the ladybug looks for places with stable temperatures to survive the winter. Often, they sneak into cracks and open holes in people's homes. The insects also do not face much threat in their natural habitats.

"Being an introduced species, they tend not to have the same predators," said Dawson," So their numbers tend to explode at certain times of year."
The pretty, yellowish-orange bug has been spotted in the small community of Winchester, Ont., just south of Ottawa, at Carleton University and even at a south Ottawa golf course.
This insect has popped up in Ontario before, though. In 2001, some vintage Ontario wines faced a plague of the insects, which led to the smell of Asian ladybugs polluting the wines — an aroma compared to "rancid peanut butter."
The Asian ladybug was first brought to North America by the U.S. government from Japan in 1988 to serve as an aggressive species for insect control.

Read more: http://ca.news.yahoo.com/biting-asian-ladybugs-invade-south-ottawa-142726367.html