Special Segments

General Topics

Pale-spotted Leafwing

(Anaea pithyusa)

 

 

Pale-spotted Leafwing (Anaea pithyusa [R. Felder])

Wing span: 2 1/4 - 3 inches (5.7 - 7.6 cm).

Identification: Upperside is black and dark blue; forewing with pale blue spots; hindwing with a tail. Underside mimics a dead leaf.

Life history: Males perch on trees to wait for females. Eggs are laid singly under leaves of host plant; caterpillars eat leaves. Young caterpillars make a perch out of a leaf midvein; older ones live in a rolled leaf shelter.

Flight: The wet season form flies from November-March; the dry season form from May-September. Flies in South Texas in March, July, September, and November.

Caterpillar hosts: Cuala (Croton lucidus) in the spurge family (Euphorbiaceae).

Adult food: Rotting fruit and dung.

Habitat: Open subtropical forests.

Range: Peru and Bolivia north through Central America to Mexico and the lower Rio Grande Valley of South Texas.

 

Pale-spotted Leafwing (Anaea pithyusa)