Cosmoclostis aglaodesma Meyrick, 1886
PTEROPHORINAE,   PTEROPHORIDAE,   PTEROPHORIOIDEA
 
Don Herbison-Evans
(donherbisonevans@yahoo.com)
and
Debbie Matthews & Stella Crossley

Cosmoclostis aglaodesma
(Photo: courtesy of Carol & Trevor Deane, Dorrigo, New South Wales)

This Caterpillar is pale green with sparse small white dots. The head is small and brown, sometimes tucked under the body. The true legs and the prolegs look similar, and are pale green with pale feet. Each side of each segment is a pale green verruca with a tuft of off-white hairs. The hairs resemble the hairs on the underside of its foodplant leaves, where it is well camouflaged.

The caterpillar has been reported feeding on the leaves and flowers of:

  • Malay Hushbeech ( Gmelina arborea , LAMIACEAE ),
  • White Beech ( Gmelina leichhardti , LAMIACEAE ), and
  • Teak ( Tectona, LAMIACEAE ).

    Cosmoclostis aglaodesma
    skeletonised leaf
    (Photo: courtesy of Carol & Trevor Deane, Dorrigo, New South Wales)

    When feeding on leaves, it eats between the veins, leaving a partial leaf skeleton behind.

    Cosmoclostis aglaodesma
    pupa
    (Photo: courtesy of Carol & Trevor Deane, Dorrigo, New South Wales)

    The caterpillar grows to a length of about 1 cm. It appears to pupate in the skin of the final instar, attached by one end to a stem of the foodplant. The cocoon has a length of about 1 cm.

    Cosmoclostis aglaodesma
    pupal exuvia after adult moth has emerged
    (Photo: courtesy of Carol & Trevor Deane, Dorrigo, New South Wales)

    The adult moth is brown with several short white stripes along each forewing, and white markings along the abdomen. The wingspan is about 1.5 cms.

    Cosmoclostis aglaodesma
    (Photo: courtesy of Carol & Trevor Deane, Dorrigo, New South Wales)

    The species has been found in

  • Queensland, and
  • New South Wales.


    Further reading :

    Edward Meyrick,
    On some Lepidoptera from New Guinea,
    On the classification of the Pterophoridae,
    1886, pp. 12-13.

    Buck Richardson,
    Tropical Queensland Wildlife from Dusk to Dawn Science and Art,
    LeapFrogOz, Kuranda, 2015, p. 185.


    previous
    back
    caterpillar
    Australian
    Australian Butterflies
    butterflies
    Australian
    home
    Lepidoptera
    Australian
    Australian Moths
    moths
    next
    next
    caterpillar

    (created 16 October 2001, updated 13 February 2026)