Hypolimnas alimena (Linnaeus, 1758)
(erroneously: Hipolimnas alimena)
Blue-banded Eggfly
NYMPHALINAE NYMPHALIDAE

Don Herbison-Evans ( donherbisonevans@yahoo.com )
&
Stella Crossley

(updated 8 May 2008)

Hypolimnas alimena

These Caterpillars are initially cream and are very hairy. Later they become black with black branched hairs. Their heads are dark brown and have a pair of long branched spines. The Caterpillars feed on various species from the plant family ACANTHACEAE, including

  • Love Flower ( Pseuderanthemum variabile ),
  • Coromandel ( Asystasia gangetica ), and
  • Caricature Plant ( Graptophyllum pictum ).

    The Caterpillars hide by day in ground debris, and feed at night. The are voracious, consuming whole plants and then searching for more.

    The pupa is dark brown with white patches and rows of sharp spines. It is suspended head down froma cremaster in a sheltered spot.

    Hypolimnas alimena
    male
    (Picture: courtesy of CSIRO Entomology)

    The adult male butterflies are black on top, with a blue band across each wing, and a double row of subterminal pale spots. Underneath, the males are brown with a smoky pale band across each wing, and a subtermial row of pale spots, and pale edges.

    Hypolimnas alimena
    ( Australia Post, 2004)

    The females have an extra white flash or row of white spots across the tip of each forewing. The undersides of the females are similar to their upper surfaces.

    This species is found in :

  • Indonesia,
  • New Guinea,
  • Solomons, and

    two subspecies are found in Australia :

  • lamina along the north-east coast of Queensland, and
  • darwinensis in the Northern Territory.


    Further reading :

    Michael F. Braby,
    Butterflies of Australia, CSIRO Publishing, Melbourne 2000, vol. 2, pp. 565-566.


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