Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Carmenta mimosa

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Kingdom
  
Family
  
Scientific name
  
Carmenta mimosa

Rank
  
Species

Class
  
Genus
  
Carmenta

Phylum
  
Order
  
Butterflies and moths

Carmenta mimosa lepidopterabutterflyhousecomausesimimosa2jpg

Similar
  
Butterflies and moths, Mimosa pigra, Acanthoscelides, Sesiidae, Chromolaena

Carmenta mimosa is a moth of the Sesiidae family. It is native to Central America (Mexico, Honduras and Nicaragua), but has been introduced to the Northern Territory of Australia in 1989.

Adults look like wasps, but have a wider connection between the thorax and abdomen. They have transparent wings with broad black margins. Their body is black, with a pair of white stripes on the thorax and three transverse white bands on the abdomen.

The larvae feed on Mimosa pigra. They bore into the stems of their host plant, weakening the stem, which can cause it to break off and die.

Life cycle

Females can lay up to 300 eggs, which take about eleven days to hatch. Larvae feed for about sixty days, after which it pupates and emerges about eleven days later. The complete life cycle takes about nine weeks.

References

Carmenta mimosa Wikipedia


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