California ladybug swarm dozens of miles
wide shows up on radar
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[June 07, 2019]
By Alex Dobuzinskis
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - A swarm of many
millions of ladybugs taking to the sky in Southern California this week
to hunt for aphids has been captured on a radar screen as a massive
blob, officials said on Thursday.
The insect swarm spanned 80 miles by 80 miles (130 km by 130 km),
centered around the town of Hesperia, more than 70 miles (110 km) east
of Los Angeles, said National Weather Service (NWS) meteorologist Adam
Roser.
After a weather spotter in the town of Wrightwood confirmed they were
ladybugs, the NWS San Diego office on Tuesday posted to Twitter a video
clip of the radar image, showing an undulating mass.
The post received more than 1,000 retweets and generated comments such
as "better than locusts" and "get those aphids!" from members of the
public.
"I thought that was pretty cool, how we can get all these different
people interested in science," Roser said.
Ladybugs, also called ladybird beetles, are considered beneficial by
gardeners as they feast on aphids, spider mites and mealy bugs.
The ladybugs are small so a person standing under a swarm would only see
dots in the sky or, from a distance, nothing at all, said Ring Cardé, a
professor of entomology at the University of California, Riverside.
What caused the swarm to form?
One possible explanation is that a large population of ladybugs had been
spread out over land in a mountainous area and rising temperatures
triggered their mass migration, Cardé said.
"It's a little bit later than I would have expected them to depart,"
Cardé said.
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Ladybugs are seen in a park near Weiterstadt, Germany, April 4,
2017. REUTERS/Kai Pfaffenbach -/File Photo
When they take to the sky, ladybugs are relying on winds to carry
them to valleys where they might find abundant amounts of aphids to
eat, Cardé said. As the insects spread out, the unlucky ones will
end up in deserts and die.
The late spring movement of the ladybugs follows a winter
hibernation in California's mountains when they gather in clusters
so thick they can be picked up with a shovel, Cardé said. The
insects try to stay alive under snow cover.
High levels of moisture and rainfall this year probably helped large
numbers of ladybugs survive the winter, Cardé said, which would
explain such a large swarm.
National Weather Service radars routinely capture birds, bats and
insects in other parts of the country.
For instance, bats often fly out of caves around Austin, Texas, and
appear on radar, while in Iowa mayflies show up from time to time,
said Jessica Schultz, deputy director of the NWS Radar Operations
Center in Norman, Oklahoma.
(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis; Editing by Sandra Maler)
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