ladybug lives in green leaf.
Yes. Ladybugs, in general, are fine with sharing a space with another ladybug, as long as there aren't an uneven amount of each gender; if so, they could fight over the ladybug.
Mostly gender differentiation has been known to be the root cause of gender inequality.
Tobias
Women
female
The 'Lady' in the word 'Ladybug' doesn't refer to the gender of the beetle. Male or female, they are all called Ladybugs, or sometimes Ladybirds. The baby ones would be referred to as a larva or a pupa, depending on what stage it is.
Coccinella is the Italian equivalent of 'ladybug', 'ladybird beetle', or 'ladybird'. It's a feminine gender noun. It's pronounced 'kohk-chee-NEH-lah'. It's plural form is 'coccinelle'.
Ladybugs (Coccinellids) are found worldwide, with over 5,000 species described, more than 450 native to North America alone. To tell gender, you must first identify WHICH ladybug you are dealing with. Some ladybugs have 7 spots, some 11, some 5, some none. Gender can not be determined by spots. Gender can be determined by the pronotum and/or facial markings, usually. To find the differences you have to look up the species (try to id it by a native insect guide or checklist, google ladybug on image search.)
No they don't a ladybug is poisonous to them
Females.
Females