The illustrations depict the life process of the ladybug, as well as its body structure.
Overall, the wheel of life of a lady bird is a natural, multi-stage and cyclical process. It begins with the ladybug laying eggs and finishes with the development of an adult insect.
To begin, a mature bug lays a large number of eggs on the leaf. It takes approximately from two to five days before the egg stage continues to the larval stage, when a larva emerges from an egg, having a defined body skeleton. After 3 weeks of the second phase, a larva turns into a chrysalis, an immature form of an adult. Following that, hexapod undergoes transformations, and this lasts for a week, before a full-grown adult bug is formed.
As regards an anatomy of a lady bird, on its upper body part it has two eyes, two antennas, which serve to smell, taste and touch objects. Two pronotums, four legs and abdomen are located on the lower body part. The insects are able to fly thanks to their two wings and red elytra, covered with black dots.
