Hypertropha chlaenota Meyrick, 1887
HYPERTROPHIDAE

Don Herbison-Evans ( donherbisonevans@yahoo.com )
&
Stella Crossley

This Caterpillar lives in a lacy silk shelter covered in frass on the underside of a leaf of a food plant. It feeds on:

  • Gum Trees ( Angophora and Eucalyptus, MYRTACEAE ).


    (Photo: courtesy of Donald Hobern, Mt. Ainslie, ACT)

    When ready to pupate, it attaches itself to a leaf or twig by the tail. When formed: the pupa sticks out, unprotected by a cocoon.


    (Specimen: courtesy of the Macleay Museum, University of Sydney)

    The adult moth has fore wings that are buff in the inner half and black in the outer half. There are black ticks along the costa in the buff half, and a muddled buff patch halfway along the trailing edge in the black half. The hind wings are bright yellow with a black marginal area. The moth has a wingspan of about 2 cms.

    The species has been found in

  • South Australia,
  • Australian Capital Territory,
  • New South Wales, and
  • Queensland.


    Further reading :

    Paul Zborowski and Ted Edwards,
    A Guide to Australian Moths, CSIRO Publishing, 2007, p. 78.


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    (updated 30 August 2011)