Don Herbison-Evans (
donherbisonevans@yahoo.com )
&
Stella Crossley
(updated 14 December 2004)

(Picture: courtesy of
The Insect Company)
The eggs of this species are white, and ridged and pitted with a height of about 1 mm. They are laid singly under leaves of a foodplant.
The Caterpillar is flattened and has fleshy lumps on most segmemts. It is coloured green with a black head, tail and thorax, and a pair of brown lines along the back. The head and tail are covered in bristles. It hides by day in a shelter of joined leaves, feeding nocturnally. It feeds on part of each leaf, leaving the leaves with a skeletonised burnt appearance Near the coast, the Caterpillar has been found feeding on various Mangroves:
and away from the coast on a variety of plants, including:
The Caterpillar is always attended by the small black ants :

It pupates in sparse cocoon in a leafy shelter. The pupa is pale grey with dark brown spots, and has a length of about 1 cm.
The adults are orange in colour with broad black bands along the costa and margin of each forewing. The females have broader black areas than the males.
<The undersurfaces of the wings are fawn, with iridescent green and black markings along the costa and margin under the forewings, and rusty brown lines of various lengths edged in iridescent green under the hindwings. The wingspan is about 3 cms.
The species occurs in Indonesia, New Guinea, and in the north-eastern coastal area of Australia, in Darwin in the Northern Teritory, and from Cape York Peninsula in Queensland to Port Macquarie in New South Wales.

Further reading :
Michael F. Braby, Butterflies of Australia, CSIRO Publishing, Melbourne 2000, vol. 2, pp. 666-667.
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