ehm, er zaten nog een paar fouten in, die haal ik er ff uit. Weet niet of ie nu perfect is, maar goed.
The program I watched was a documentary about ladybirds. It addressed where the ladybirds live, how the reproduction takes place, how they grow up and who their enemies are.
You can find ladybirds everywhere. Even though most of them look very similar, there are still many sorts of ladybirds.
The most common and famous one is of course the red ladybird with black spots on its back.
There is hardly any difference between the male and the female. In winter they mainly live under the leaves of trees, and in spring, when it gets a little warmer, they come out. This is because they can’t stand the cold very well. The warmer it is, the more ladybirds there are.
The reproduction takes 2 hours or more, during which the female lays an average of 200 to 300 eggs.
When the young ladybirds get out of their egg after one week they do not look like ladybirds at all yet. First they are still a larva, after which they form a cocoon. From that the ladybird gets out as we know it. The first days or weeks, they don’t have a red colour but they are yellow, but afer a while they turn red.
The ladybird also has enemies, mankind with his insect spray being one of them. Another enemy is the wasp, because the wasp lays her eggs in the ladybird. When the egg comes out, the ladybird is killed.