RMFX2475–Attractive patterned Australian castor / croton caterpillar, semi-looper Achaea janata among golden yellow leaves of croton
RF2GM7XXH–Australian castor semi-looper moth, achaea janata, resting on dark background. Garden in summer, Tamborine Mountain, Queensland.
RMRBX939–Achaea janata (1377107948).
RF2HYJ7YG–Australian castor semi-looper moth, achaea janata, resting with folded wings on a dark surface, Queensland, night time. Delicately patterned.
RM2KCK6WJ–The castor semi-looper or croton caterpillar (Achaea janata) is an erebid moth, the caterpillars of which are termed 'semi-loopers' due to their mode of locomotion. It is found from the Indo-Australian tropics and subtropics, extending south to New Zealand and east through the Pacific archipelagoes to Easter Island. It is a major pest of castor throughout the world. A croton caterpillar is mimicking a guava tree branch for self-defense at Tehatta, West Bengal; India on 26/08/2021. (Photo by Soumyabrata Roy/NurPhoto)
RM2A77G48–Castor semi-looper moth, Achaea janata 1, epione underwing, Catocala epione 2, Noctua pales 3, Hyalurga vinosa 4, Noctua numeria 5, and sweetfern underwing, Catocala antinympha 6. Handcoloured lithograph from John O. Westwood's new edition of Dru Drury's 'Illustrations of Exotic Entomology,' Bohn, London, 1837.
RMP2D2XT–. Achaea janata (caster oil looper) Phylum ARTHROPODA Class HEXAPODA Order Lepidoptera Family Noctuidae . before 11 November, 2004. Unknown 2 Achaea janata (ento-csiro-au)
RMP6H6WD–Castor semi-looper moth, Achaea janata 1, epione underwing, Catocala epione 2, Noctua pales 3, Hyalurga vinosa 4, Noctua numeria 5, and sweetfern underwing, Catocala antinympha 6. Handcoloured lithograph from John O. Westwood's new edition of Dru Drury's 'Illustrations of Exotic Entomology,' Bohn, London, 1837.
RF2RE43KA–Australian moth, achaea janata, castor-oil semi-looper, on black background in Queensland garden in autumn. Pastel shades. Copy space.
RM2KCK6WF–The castor semi-looper or croton caterpillar (Achaea janata) is an erebid moth, the caterpillars of which are termed 'semi-loopers' due to their mode of locomotion. It is found from the Indo-Australian tropics and subtropics, extending south to New Zealand and east through the Pacific archipelagoes to Easter Island. It is a major pest of castor throughout the world. A croton caterpillar is mimicking a guava tree branch for self-defense at Tehatta, West Bengal; India on 26/08/2021. (Photo by Soumyabrata Roy/NurPhoto)
RMP5XKDT–N/A. Plate LXII A, B: '(Papilio) Ino' ( = Cethosia cydippe cydippe), see Funet C, D: '(Phalaena) Melicerta' ( = Achaea janata), see Funet E, F: '(Papilio) Erigone' ( = Junonia erigone, iconotype), see Funet . 1779. Pieter Cramer (1721 - 1776) and Caspar Stoll (between 1725 and 1730 - 1791) 388 Cramer&Stoll-uitlandsche kapellen vol. 1- plate 062
RM2KCK6WE–The castor semi-looper or croton caterpillar (Achaea janata) is an erebid moth, the caterpillars of which are termed 'semi-loopers' due to their mode of locomotion. It is found from the Indo-Australian tropics and subtropics, extending south to New Zealand and east through the Pacific archipelagoes to Easter Island. It is a major pest of castor throughout the world. A croton caterpillar is mimicking a guava tree branch for self-defense at Tehatta, West Bengal; India on 26/08/2021. (Photo by Soumyabrata Roy/NurPhoto)
RMP5YJRD–N/A. Plate CCCXXIII Warning: some taxa/names may be misidentified/misapplied or placed in a different genus. A, B: '(Phalaena) Hypermnestra' ( = Eudocima hypermnestra (Cramer, 1780), see Funet). Photos at Barcode of Life. C, D, E: '(Phalaena) Melicerta' ( = Achaea janata (Linnaeus, 1758), see Funet). Photos at Barcode of Life. F: '(Phalaena) Mezentia' ( = Acanthodelta mezentia (Stoll, 1780), iconotype, see NHM, Global Lepidoptera Names Index). . 1779. Pieter Cramer (1721 - 1776) and Caspar Stoll (between 1725 and 1730 - 1791) 389 CramerAndStoll-uitlandsche kapellen vol. 4- pl 323
RM2KCK6WK–The castor semi-looper or croton caterpillar (Achaea janata) is an erebid moth, the caterpillars of which are termed 'semi-loopers' due to their mode of locomotion. It is found from the Indo-Australian tropics and subtropics, extending south to New Zealand and east through the Pacific archipelagoes to Easter Island. It is a major pest of castor throughout the world. A croton caterpillar is mimicking a guava tree branch for self-defense at Tehatta, West Bengal; India on 26/08/2021. (Photo by Soumyabrata Roy/NurPhoto)
RM2KCK6WH–The castor semi-looper or croton caterpillar (Achaea janata) is an erebid moth, the caterpillars of which are termed 'semi-loopers' due to their mode of locomotion. It is found from the Indo-Australian tropics and subtropics, extending south to New Zealand and east through the Pacific archipelagoes to Easter Island. It is a major pest of castor throughout the world. A croton caterpillar is mimicking a guava tree branch for self-defense at Tehatta, West Bengal; India on 26/08/2021. (Photo by Soumyabrata Roy/NurPhoto)
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