No, there are many species of ladybugs, they can be told apart mostly by the numbers and place of their dots and their colors.
There is no easy way to tell males and females apart, except that if you see them mating, the one on top will be the male. Within a species differences in color and dots may exist, in some species even very large differences so that you wouldn't think they are the same species. Also you cannot tell how old they are from the number of dots - once emerged from their pupa the number of dots does not change and they do not grow.
a male ladybug is darker then the female. if you cant tell if the ladybug is a male or female and you have 2 one would be on top of the other top one = male bottom = female
well you just call it a lady bug
you see if it has a wiener
the amount of spots a girl or boy ladybug has
females are usually larger than males. if you see one ladybug riding atop another ladybug, they are in the process of mating. A male ladybug will grab the female's elytra (hard wings) and holds on tight. Girl lady bugs are big. Boy lady bugs are small. Some people think that boy lady bugs don't have any spots. But actully, all lady bugs have spots.
The Ladybug (or Lady Bird in the UK) was a male; so a boy.
orange ladybug
BOY
the same as the boy. but it is more than one ladybug races. and lot of different colors. yellow and redd is too of them.
. Girl
The ISBN of Ladybug Girl is 978-0803731950.
Ladybug Girl has 40 pages.