it can be any colour but it depends on what type of the ladybird it is?!
Not extremely but most animals hate their taste.
Yes, the ladybird spider is venomous, but its venom is not considered harmful to humans. These spiders primarily use their venom to immobilize their prey, which consists mainly of insects.
their colour....nothing else Different species of ladybird have different colors, including scarlet, orange, yellow, even blue or green. (See related link, below, for images.)
Yellow rattle is poisonous to horses. It is poisonous to other livestock as well. Yellow rattle is also known by the names cockscomb, and rattle-basket.
by the colour of there neck yellow girl boy red
To humans, no ladybirds are poisonous. In fact no ladybirds contain any venom. They may well be deadly to aphids, but that is not poisonous.
no
Ladybirds (sometimes known as Ladybugs) are a family of small rounded, brightly coloured beetles. The scientific name for the family is Coccinellidae.In nature most predators associate bright colours (especially orange and black or yellow and black) with poison and other unpleasant properties, and in fact most coccinellids are poisonous to smaller predators such as lizards and small birds and other insects.The toxin is in the blood of the ladybird but as a defense mechanism it can be squirted out of pores in the exo-skeleton - particularly through joints in the legs. The strength of the toxin can vary with the age of the ladybird, the diet that it eats and the species.A human would have to eat at least several hundred before feeling any effects other than a bad taste.
no but if their poop gets into your skin you are but the poop would have to be there for a while to get into your skin
Yes, a ladybird or ladybug does change color as it gets older. This beetle can change from brown to yellow to orange or red during its lifetime.
yes all black and yellow spiders in the U.S or Canada is highley poisonous