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

note the silk thread: this specimen has just landed
on another leaf after dropping from its piece of grass
(Photo: courtesy of the
Macleay Museum, University of Sydney)
Early instars of this Caterpillar are light green, with a pale brown head with dark markings. Later instars are darker with pairs of dark warts on each segment along the back.

The Caterpillars feed on a wide variety of Grass species ( POACEAE ), and can cause severe damage to pastures and lawns. Each Caterpillar lives in a tube made of leaves of its food plant, lined with silk, at the soil surface. When disturbed, it can wriggle violently backward, and if possible drop on a silken thread. It grows to length of about 2 cms.

The adult has fawn wings with rows of indistinct dark spots. It has a wingspan of about 2 cms.
The moth has a characteristic posture when at rest. It sits with its wings flat, and half open, with the hind wings half covered by the fore wings, and with the abdomen curved up.
It occurs over much of the world, and over the north-east quarter of Australia, being often the commonest moth found in Sydney. It has been the object of study by Andrew Ward at the University of Queensland. The moth appears to invading overseas, specimens having been taken in:
Control may be effected using
Further reading :
Ian F.B. Common,
Moths of Australia,
Melbourne University Press, 1990, fig. 33.18, pp. 66, 356.
Paul Zborowski and Ted Edwards,
A Guide to Australian Moths,
CSIRO Publishing, 2007, p. 133.
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(updated 4 November 2010)