Don Herbison-Evans (
donherbisonevans@yahoo.com )
&
Stewart Newman &
Stella Crossley
(updated 6 May 2008)

(Photo: courtesy of R.P. Field,
Museum Victoria)
This species was probably named after Alexander Macleay, a great international entomologist, and at that time (1814) the chairman of the Linnean Society of London. Later he emigrated to Australia, taking his great insect collection with him, and using it to found the Macleay Museum at the University of Sydney.
The Caterpillar is green with a humped thorax, and small white dots over the body. It feeds on the foliage various species of Sassafras:
and Australian native Pepper trees:
and various other subtropical trees, including:
The caterpillar grows to a length of about 4 cms.
The pupa is green with thin yellow lines. It suspended from a cremaster and girdle on the underside of foodplant leaf.

The adult butterflies have a wing span around 8 cms. The upperside of the wings is green with black and white markings.

Males congregate around hilltops, where they can be seen defending their territory from rival males and courting passing females. We used to watch them flying above the eucalypts at the highest point of a local hill. They rarely came down to a catchable height.

The undersides are green with black and brown margins.

Various races have been described, including:

The eggs are round and pale green. They are laid singly on young shoots of a food plant.

Further reading :
Michael F. Braby,
Butterflies of Australia,
CSIRO Publishing, Melbourne 2000, vol. 1, pp. 256-258.
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