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

(Photo: courtesy of Wes Jenkinson)
This Caterpillar is green or brown, with a broad white-edged dorsal line.

The caterpillar is aways attended by the green ants :
It usually hides by day under a leaf, and feeds by night on the leaves, young shoots, buds, and flowers of a wide variety of plants, including :
The Caterpillars pupate on the stems of the food plant, often in groups, head down. The pupae are green or brown with dark flecks and mottling. They have a length of about 1.5 cms.

The adults are brown on top. The males have fore wings with a blue sheen and a large dark patch in the middle.

The females have fore wings with a white patch having a blue edge. The hind wings of both sexes each have two little tails from the trailing edge each beside a large black and white eye spot.

Underneath, the butterflies are fawn, each wing having two rows of darker spots parallel to the wing margins. The hind wings each have two small orange and black eye spots on the trailing edge. The butterflies fly fast and are inclined to settle on the tips of twigs. They have a wing span of about 3 cms.

The eggs are white and hemispherical and rough. They are laid singly on the underside a foodplant leaf.
The species also occurs over New Guinea, and two subspecies have been recognised in Australia :
Further reading :
Michael F. Braby,
Butterflies of Australia,
CSIRO Publishing, Melbourne 2000, vol. 2, pp. 735-736.
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(updated 24 November 2010)