This ladybird was first described by Carl Linnaeus in his 1758 10th edition of Systema Naturae as Coccinella 14-guttata. As ladybirds were further studied, it was transferred to the genus Calvia which was erected in 1873 by the French entomologist Étienne Mulsant. The specific name comes from quatuordecim, the Latin for "fourteen" and guttata, the Latin for "spotted". This ladybird is also sometimes known as the cream-spotted ladybird, polkadot ladybird or eighteen spot ladybird, and may
be confused with another beetle also known as the eighteen-spot ladybird (Myrrha octodecimguttata). The latter is usually found on pine trees, is smaller and a paler brown colour, and has a characteristic M-shaped white mark on its pronotum.




