Look at the picture again, the picture the OP put up has a black bug with red/orange spots, not a red/orange bug with black spots. Unless my eyes are a whole lot worse than I realize.
Hard to tell. I took it as orange with those black spots running together. Could be the other way I guess too. It's springtime and I got those Asian Lady Beetles waking up and they are everywhere.
wow awesome post, thanks for the chart, let me have a look and ill tell you which one I think it was. Dosnt really matter now tho, I already let the guy go.
I think what you got here is an Asian Lady Beetle. Some parts of America are experiencing an epidemic the past few years. Between the late 1910’s and the mid-1970's, there were several planned and accidental introductions to the U.S., with no survival. Many planned releases across the eastern U.S. in the late 1970's and early 1980's were attempts to use the beetles to help control aphids and scales. After years without a sighting, the beetle was seen in Louisiana in 1988. Whether this final, successful colonization was due to a planned release or an accidental introduction is under debate. Invasion Biology Introduced Species Summary Project - Columbia University
freakin me out now, should I have killed that thing!?!?!?! they dont eat pets do they? ooo fuck, what have I done.....
WOW you need to get outside more..nature is awesome.
__________________
This account is only for entertainment purposes. Everything I say on here is totally fictional. HippiePower is a character in my imagination.