Cyana meyricki

Cyana meyricki

The Cyana meyricki is a large moth species found in Australia.

The cocoon made by the caterpillar is quite remarkable. It is an open square mesh cage, constructed out of larval hairs held together with silk. The hairs are too short to construct the cage directly, so the caterpillar attaches pairs of hairs to each other end to end, and uses these pairs to make the sides of the cage. The pupa is suspended in the middle of the cage, equidistant from the sides. The caterpillar even manages to push its final larval skin outside the mesh cage while forming its pupa. When the moth emerges, it appears to exit the cage without damaging it.
Cyana meyricki  Cyana meyricki,butterflies,moths

Appearance

The adult moth of this species has brown forewings with black edges. The hindwings are black, with a yellow spot in the middle of each one. The moth has a wingspan of about 3 cms.

References:

Some text fragments are auto parsed from Wikipedia.

http://lepidoptera.butterflyhouse.com.au/arct/meyrick.html
http://lepbarcoding.org/australia/species.php?region=1&id=68733
Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionArthropoda
ClassInsecta
OrderLepidoptera
FamilyErebidae
GenusCyana
SpeciesCyana meyricki