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

(Photo: courtesy of Alice Ewing, taken near Broome)
These caterpillars are green with a pale line along each side, and have a brown head and legs, and a brown spike on the thorax. They are speckled all over with pale yellow dots.

They have a flat tail which they normally bend back over the body to show the underside which has markings like a leaf.

The caterpillars have been found feeding on:
Pupation occurs in a tough cocoon, typically on the trunk of its foodplant. The pupa has a spine on the head which is used to cut through the cocoon when the adult is to emerge.

The adult moths of this species have forewings which are a patchy greyish-brown. Each hindwing is mainly white, with a small dark patch near the apex and near the tornus. In its resting pose: it sticks its forelegs, which are very hairy, out in front of the body.
The species is found in
Further reading :
Ian F.B. Common,
Moths of Australia,
Melbourne University Press, 1990, p. 421.
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(updated 8 April 2011)