Actias dubernardi
Actias dubernardi | |
---|---|
adult male | |
adult female | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Class: | Insecta |
Order: | Lepidoptera |
Family: | Saturniidae |
Genus: | Actias |
Species: | A. dubernardi |
Binomial name | |
Actias dubernardi (Oberthür, 1897) | |
The Chinese moon moth or Chinese luna moth (Actias dubernardi) is a moth of the Family Saturniidae.
Range
This moth can be found in parts of China.
Life cycle
It takes 70–85 days from an egg to the adult, depending on the temperature and humidity conditions. It uses its colorful wings to attract its mate
Egg
Female lays up to 120 eggs, she doesn't care about the place of ovaposit. The egg is oval-shaped, 1,5mm x 1mm; whitegrey colour, firmly stuck to branches or sides of the cage that the female had been kept in. 4-5mm long caterpillars hatch after 10–14 days, the warmer and the higher the humidity, the quicker it happens.
Larva
Newly hatched larva is of black colour with hairs, it sheds its skin 4-5 times in its larval stage. Until the second instar it is orangebrown, after which it changes into beautiful green with silver spots. It is hairy in all its stages, and it feeds on pine tree. Fully-grown caterpillar is 60-75mm long. It spins its brownish cocoon on the soil, but more often among pine needles. They are easy to rear, so long as you can get them to eat in the 1st instar. The species comes from high mountainous regions, so it is quite cold-hardy. It is best reared in-doors, sleeved on a small pine-tree.
Pupa
The chrystalis is about 35mm long, and the imago emerges from the cocoon after about 4 weeks, dependent on the temperature and humidity.
Adult
An adult moth's life is short, no longer than 10 – 12 days (females live longer due to their fat reserves). Pairing is easy, in medium-sized cage. A beautiful hybrid with Graellsia isabellae has been obtained some years ago by a team of several French entomologists ( D.Adés, R.Cocault, R.Lemaitre, R.Zaun,R.Vuattoux).
Host Plants
Pine tree - Pinus sp. Caterpillars rather like Pinus sylvestris, but they will also eat Pinus nigra.