Species Hippodamia tredecimpunctata - Thirteen-spotted Lady Beetle
Review of the New World Species of Hippodamia Dejean (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae) By Edward A. Chapin Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collection, vol. 106 no. 11, 1946
With 246 figures, this 1946 publication is still the visual reference for North American Hippodamia. (Gordon (1) and American Beetles both refer the reader to it for more comprehensive illustrations than their own publications provide.) Chapin examined thousands of specimens of each species, and illustrated the complete range of dorsal patterns for each. The male genitalia of each species is also illustrated.
Range maps, though limited, accurately depict type localities. Species names match modern taxonomy, but subspecies are outdated. The non-native species H.
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The Coccinellidae (Ladybird Beetles) of Minnesota By Stehr, W.C. 1930. Univ. Minn. Agr. Expt. Sta., St.Paul, 1930
Stehr, W.C. 1930. The Coccinellidae (Ladybird Beetles) of Minnesota. Univ. Minn. Agr. Expt. Sta. Tech. Bull. 75. 54 pp.
Contributed by Mike Quinn on 18 December, 2009 - 3:23pm |
Studies in Coccinellidae By George H. Horn Transactions of the American Entomological Society, vol. 22, 1895
Available free online:
http://entomology.lsu.edu/lsam/horn/Horn255.pdf
Concentrates on Tribe Scymnini, with keys, descriptions, and external dorsal figures of the insects.
Limitations:
- Taxonomy outdated, and obviously nothing discovered after 1895
- No figures of appendages or internal anatomy.
What makes up for limitations:
- More-detailed keys and descriptions and more dorsal figures of Tribe Scymnini species than in Gordon's 1985 "The Coccinellidae (Coleoptera) of America North of Mexico." (1)
- Availabl
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Ladybugs of Alberta By John Acorn University of Alberta Press, 169 pages, 2007
-states that it is the first field guide on Ladybugs of any region of North America...
-covers 75 species found in Alberta, many of which are also widespread across the continent
-Colour plates at beginning of book illustrated by author are very useful, often showing variation within a species
-While it could have been edited rather more tightly, I still find this book to be very useful and It has helped me ID quite a few species in a region more than a thousand miles away...And while the author gets a little deeply into the debate of whether or not "invasive", exotic" or otherwise imported species are useful, beneficial, harmful, etc, this book still has loads of useful information, including lots of easily readable stuff on natural history, collecting techniques and so on...I would give it an enthusiastic "two thumbs up"!
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Larval key to Genera and selected Species of North American Cocinellidae (Coleoptera) By Rees, B. E., Anderson, D. M., Bouk, D., and Gordon, R. D. Proceedings of The Entomological Society of Washington, vol. 96(3), pp. 387-412, 1994
"Abstract - An illustrated key to the larvae of 46 of the 60 genera of North American Coccinellidae is presented." (including all genera currently represented in BugGuide) Fourteen genera are not yet understood sufficiently to include.
Paper includes many detailed figures of overall habitus and structures necessary for keys including; head and mouthparts, antennae, body structures and armature types.
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The Scymnini (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae) of the United States & Canada: Key to genera and revision of Scymnus, Nephus, & Diomus By Robert D. Gordon Bulletin of the Buffalo Society of Natural Sciences, Buffalo, NY, Vol 28, 1976
While Gordon's 1985 work, "The Coccinellidae (Coleoptera) of America North of Mexico" (ref (1)) does contain keys, illustrations, and distribution maps for all species, for "detailed description and discussion" for Scymnini the reader is referred to this earlier work.
As of 2006, copies were still available from the publisher.
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The Coleoptera of Florida By Schwarz, E. A. 1878. Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 17: 353–472., 1878
Full Text
Schwarz, E.A. 1878. The Coleoptera of Florida. Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 17: 353–472.
Contributed by Mike Quinn on 8 August, 2009 - 8:52pm |
Catalogue of the Described Coleoptera of the United States By Friedrich Ernst Melsheimer, revised by S.S. Haldeman and J.L. Le Conte. 1853. Smithsonian Institution, Washington D.C., 1853
Full Text
Lists original publication for each beetle species described prior to January 1852.
Melsheimer, F.E. 1853. Catalogue of the described Coleoptera of the United States. Smithsonian Institution, Washington D.C., xvi + 174 pp.
Contributed by Mike Quinn on 18 June, 2009 - 12:55am |
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