Black arches

Lymantria monacha

The black arches or nun moth is a small Palaearctic moth. It is considered a forest pest.
Lymantria monacha - Nun Moth This was just another moth when I pulled the trigger, well, my eyesight is pretty poor. I wear glasses to be able to use the computer, so it is amazing that I find any bugs at all, as I hate wearing glasses with the camera.

Back at the lab, I pulled the image up and was immediately struck by the face pattern. I really hate researching moths, probably because I have not done enough, but this one came up pretty quick.

It is mostly recorded as a European moth, but has been recorded as far as Japan. But two other photographers have images of the same moth within a hundred miles of my location.

Location is Bandung, West Java, Indonesia. Alongside a stream and paddy fields.
http://www.jungledragon.com/image/37772/lymantria_monacha_-_nun_moth.html
http://www.jungledragon.com/image/37771/lymantria_monacha_-_nun_moth.html Bandung,Black arches,Fall,Geotagged,Indonesia,Java,Lymantria monacha,Moth Week 2018,Nun moth,West Java,face,moth

Appearance

The moths of ''Lymantria monacha'' have a wingspan of 40 to 50 mm. They have white forewings with black connected wavy arches which gives the moth its name. The light brown hindwings have white fringes having black spots. They also have a characteristic biscuit-coloured abdomen with a black band. Females are larger and have elongated wings.

The eggs are oval, light brown or light red. Larvae are whitish grey to blackish, with grey hairs, red and blue warts, and a dark longitudinal dorsal line which is interrupted or broadened into spots in places. Pupa is golden glossy red-brown or dark brown, with reddish hairs dorsally and rather long anal point.For a key to the terms used, see :Glossary of entomology terms.
White forewing with black basal spots and four sharply angulate black transverse lines, the second of which is the broadest; hindwing greyish white and grey. Abdomen light rosepink. The species varies strongly and has received the following aberrational names, ''nigra'' Fr.: The two central bands are confluent at the costal and posterior margins, forming black spots, or the whole median area is dark, the red of the abdomen usually weaker, ''eremita'' G.: Forewing and abdomen smoke-brown or blackish grey, the former with black markings, ''atra'' Linst.: Forewing uniformly black, without markings, hindwing greyish brown, abdomen black, lutea Anel is a light form in which the central bands are interrupted; the red colour of the abdomen is equally deep almost to the thorax, ''flavoabdominalis'' Schultz has the abdomen yellow instead of red; ''subfusca'' Schultz female is distinguished by everything which is black in true ''monacha'' being yellowish brown, and the abdomen being also yellowish brown instead of red; in ''obsoleta'' Schultz the dark transverse bands in the median area of the forewing are absent, while they remain in the basal and outer-marginal areas. All these names were given to European specimens.
Black arches or nun moth - Lymantria_bonacha Can you help me verify this species? Seen in my house, Belgium
According to my area and the pics of this link 
https://www.lepinet.fr/especes/nation/lep/index.php?id=38680&e=l
and my nature guides, I think this is it. Belgium,Black arches,Geotagged,International Moth Week,Lepidoptera,Lymantria monacha,Moth Week,Moth Week 2020,National Moth Week,Spring,moth,moth week,moths

Behavior

The larvae hibernate when young, remain together in batches and are fullgrown in June.
Lymantria monacha - Nun Moth Location is Bandung, West Java, Indonesia. Alongside a stream and paddy fields.
http://www.jungledragon.com/image/37773/lymantria_monacha_-_nun_moth.html Bandung,Black arches,Fall,Geotagged,Indonesia,Java,Lymantria monacha,Nun moth,West Java,face,moth

Food

The larvae feed preferentially on spruce and pine . They also feed on silver fir , European larch , aspen , hornbeam , European beech , pedunculate oak , apple , sycamore , bilberry and bogberry . In spring the larvae consume the first buds, then later the needles. A single caterpillar eats about 200 pine, or 1000 spruce needles and twice as many are damaged by biting off. Spruces die at 70 percent needle loss and pine at 90 percent. There is also a danger increased of secondary infections by longhorn beetles, bark beetles, fungi or other pathogens. Therefore, outbreaks can cause major damage in forestry.

References:

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Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionArthropoda
ClassInsecta
OrderLepidoptera
FamilyErebidae
GenusLymantria
SpeciesL. monacha
Photographed in
Belgium
Indonesia