
Calling all ladybird spotters: help fill in the picture on these charismatic little bugs
ladybird
lately?
They're considered to be a sign of good luck. If you spot one, your wish will be granted, or if you are hoping for a proposal, a ladybird landing on your hand means you'll be married within the year.
These are charismatic little bugs. With their striking bright red wing cases and symmetrical black dots, it's no wonder they are held in more affection than most others on the planet.
In many languages, the ladybird is called 'little cow', and in Irish the insect is called 'Bóín Dé', or God's little cow. This could be because their spots resemble the patterns on some cows, or because they were traditionally seen as a blessing from God for pest control.
READ MORE
You see, ladybirds are not just gorgeous to look at, they perform some vital and beneficial work too. Most ladybirds are predators, with both adults and larvae feeding on aphids and other pests that damage plants and crops.
Harmless to humans, the ladybird is a voracious garden predator, munching through about 5,000 aphids in its year-long life. Aphids and such other pests damage plants and crops. It's no wonder farmers and gardeners love ladybirds as they do such important work.
If your dahlias are being devoured by aphids right now and you see a ladybird, make a wish for more ladybirds.
A ladybird investigating a buttercup flower. Photograph: Nick Bradshaw
By far the most well known of the species in Ireland is the seven-spot ladybird. However, there are 38 species that occur here, according to
Ireland's National Biodiversity Data Centre
. Some of these are small and unspotted – so perhaps a bit less flamboyant than the ones we readily identify.
Quite a bit of data exists on the distribution and status of ladybirds in
Northern Ireland
thanks to research there, but our knowledge in the Republic is still a bit, well, spotty.
That's about to change. The compilation of the national Ladybird Atlas 2025 is under way and with your help, the National Biodiversity Data Centre, in conjunction with the Centre for Environmental Data and Recording (CEDaR) is aiming to map all the species here.
[
How to make the best of light and shade in your garden
Opens in new window
]
[
A magical Burren garden that is at one with the wider, wilder world around it
Opens in new window
]
By doing so, scientists hope to understand where all the ladybirds are, and where they are not. The map will provide a picture of the habitat different species of ladybird prefer too.
It's really easy to help – if you see a ladybird,
submit your sighting through Ireland's Citizen Science Portal
.
Here you'll be asked to identify where you saw it – right down to the village or townland, whether it's an adult or a larva, and how many you saw. You can upload a picture too – of the ladybird that is.
From Tralee to Thurles, Tallaght to New Twopothouse, citizen scientists have been busy sending in their sightings. People in Athenry, Athy and Ardee have been at it too. Some 1,040 seven-spotted ladybirds have been spotted so far this year.
Their reported sightings ramped up from about 95 in May to over 200 of them in June.
You might consider going a step farther by developing your ladybird identification skills and becoming a ladybird recorder for your area.
Right now, it is an important time for ladybirds – having mated in May, between June to July, females lay their fertilised eggs in bundles on leaves. When the larvae hatch, they feed on aphids until they emerge as fully grown ladybirds.
A black ladybird takes off from a flower on the banks of the river Camac in Kilmainham. Photograph: Marc O'Sullivan
A ladybird can live in hedgerows, trees and grasslands, so you'll do them a favour by mowing less or allowing a small section of your garden to stay wild. If you must weed, do it manually and don't use pesticides and insecticides.
These chemicals can kill, harm, and disorientate insects or poison their food. If you buy plants at a garden centre, ask if they have been treated with chemicals. Even bee-friendly labelled plants may have been treated, harming ladybirds and other insects.
It would be a shame not to spot any more of them.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Post
7 hours ago
- Irish Post
Government backs plan to boost Ireland's AI capacity by linking with EU superhub
THE Irish Government has backed plans to boost the nation's artificial intelligence capacity by linking to EU-based resources. A new proposal is being formulated to support Ireland hosting an AI Factory Antenna, which would link the nation with greater resources available elsewhere in the EU. Ireland's Minister for Further and Higher Education, Research, Innovation and Science, James Lawless confirmed the Government's support for the initiative, which will link Ireland directly to the French 'AI2F' Factory – a leading AI hub. Minister James Lawless 'The Irish centre would provide access to computing infrastructure, technical support, and training to help Irish innovators develop, test, and scale AI models and applications,' Mr Lawless' department confirmed. The move would give researchers, businesses, and public sector organisations in Ireland access to world-class AI computing power and expertise they claim. 'This is about ensuring Irish startups, SMEs, researchers and the public sector can fully participate in the next generation of AI innovation,' Minister Lawless said. 'By connecting to the French AI Factory, we will unlock cutting-edge tools and computing power for use here at home, with a focus on sectors where AI can make a real difference like health, energy and advanced materials.' He explained: 'This initiative will enhance Irish uptake of AI, enabling AI scaling and optimisation, in a way that is inclusive and affordable. 'It aligns closely with the 'AI Continent Action Plan', launched in April 2025, which sets out plans to establish the EU as a global AI leader. 'It is also fully in line with key Irish strategies such as the National Digital Strategy and the 'National AI Strategy' which Government recently agreed to update during 2025, signalling Ireland's ambition to remain a global AI and digital leader. 'We want Irish innovators to be AI creators and not simply users. I am also strongly committed to strengthening Ireland's High Performance Computing Infrastructure which is strategic investment in Ireland's digital future.' See More: AI Factory Antenna, Artificial Intelligence, Ireland


Irish Times
11 hours ago
- Irish Times
Eight healthy babies born in UK after IVF using DNA from three people
Doctors in the UK have announced the birth of eight healthy babies after performing a groundbreaking procedure that creates IVF embryos with DNA from three people to prevent the children from inheriting incurable genetic disorders. The mothers were all high risk for passing on life-threatening diseases to their babies due to mutations in their mitochondria, the tiny structures that sit inside cells and provide the power they need to function. News of the births and the children's health has been long-anticipated by doctors around the world after the UK changed the law to allow the procedure in 2015. The fertility regulator granted the first licence in 2017 to a fertility clinic at Newcastle University where doctors pioneered the technique. The four boys and four girls, including one set of identical twins, were born to seven women and have no signs of the mitochondrial diseases they were at risk of inheriting. One further pregnancy is ongoing. READ MORE Prof Doug Turnbull, who was part of the team that spent more than two decades developing the procedure, said the healthy births were reassuring for researchers and the families affected. 'You are inevitably thinking it's great for the patients and that is a relief,' he said. Prof Mary Herbert, another senior member of the team, said to have eight healthy babies from the procedure was 'rewarding for all of us'. The vast majority of a human's 20,000 genes are curled up in the nucleus of nearly every cell in the body. But the fluid surrounding the nucleus contains hundreds to thousands of mitochondria that carry their own set of 37 genes. Mutations in these genes can impair or completely disable mitochondria with catastrophic effects. People inherit all their mitochondria from their biological mother. Mutations in the tiny battery-like structures can affect all the children a woman has. The first symptoms of mitochondrial disease tend to appear in early childhood as energy-hungry organs such as the brain, heart and muscles start to fail. Many affected children have developmental delays, require wheelchairs and die young. About one in 5,000 newborns are affected. Mitochondrial donation treatment, or MDT, aims to prevent children from inheriting mutated mitochondria. The procedure involves fertilising the mother's egg with the father's sperm and then transferring the genetic material from the nucleus into a fertilised healthy donor egg that has had its own nucleus removed. This creates a fertilised egg with a full set of chromosomes from the parents, but healthy mitochondria from the donor. The egg is then implanted into the womb to establish a pregnancy. The first eight babies born to the procedure are described in two papers in the New England Journal of Medicine. All eight were healthy at birth. One child developed a urinary infection that was treated, and another developed muscle jerks that resolved on their own. A third child developed high blood fat and a disturbance in their heart rhythm, which was also treated. The condition is thought to be related to a medical issue the mother had in pregnancy. Genetic tests showed that the babies had no or low levels of mutant mitochondria, with some carried over from the mother during the procedure. While the levels are considered too low to cause disease, it suggests the procedure could still be improved. Some women who carry the genetic disorders produce eggs with varying levels of faulty mitochondria. For them, a technique called pre-implantation genetic testing can be used to select eggs for IVF that have a very low chance of passing on a disease. Other women do not have this choice because all their eggs have high levels of mutations. — the Guardian


Irish Times
2 days ago
- Irish Times
Cern decision by Cabinet opens up particle research opportunities for Ireland
Ireland's long journey to membership of Cern , one of the world's largest centres for scientific research, has reached its destination following a Cabinet decision. It opens up opportunities for Irish companies, scientists, students and wider society to reap the benefits of working in the world's most famous particle laboratory in Switzerland. The European Organisation for Nuclear Research (Cern) is home to the Large Hadron Collider, a huge underground ring in which protons – one of the constituent particles of an atom – are accelerated close to the speed of light and collided into one another. It was used to discover the Higgs boson, the so-called 'god particle', which gives matter mass and holds the physical fabric of the universe together. [ Q&A: It promises to boost research, industry and education. So, why has it taken so long for Ireland to join Cern? Opens in new window ] Many technologies developed at Cern have gone on to have applications in medicine, space, energy and ICT, such as the world wide web and touch-sensitive technology in smartphones. READ MORE 'Associate membership of Cern will demonstrate Ireland's commitment to science and reaffirm our reputation as a centre for scientific investment,' said Tánaiste Simon Harris after the Cabinet meeting on Tuesday. 'It will create opportunities for Irish researchers, students and industry to join world-class teams at Cern, and it will give Cern access to Ireland's talent and expertise.' 'Having personally advocated for Ireland's associate membership of Cern for a long time, it is a pleasure to officially announce [we] will join Cern in October this year. Today's Cabinet approval is a milestone which authorises the final legal steps,' said Minister for Science James Lawless . University College Dublin, whose physicists have been involved in Cern research for many years, said it is to expand its particle research capacity following Ireland's decision to become a member country. UCD vice-president for research, innovation and impact, Prof Kate Robson Brown said: 'This is a very important step for Ireland, to take our place in Europe's largest scientific organisation, which enables collaborations with the best researchers, institutions and companies all over the world.'