
Eggs: The eggs are greenish-white and spherical with faint sculpturing.
Larvae: The larvae are small (to 1.9 cm in length) and slug-like, brightly patterned with gray, yellow and white, and covered with bristly hairs; the pattern is often obscured with the white wax produced by the prey (Minno et al 2005).
Pupae: The pupae are off-white and have a pattern that resembles the face of a lizard or monkey (Krizek 1995).
Overwintering is by the pupal (chrysalis) stage (Allen 1997).
Because the harvester caterpillar is carnivorous, development proceeds very rapidly, with the larval stage being completed in as little as eight days. Harvester larvae have only four larval instars. Most other butterflies have five (Layberry et al. 2002). First instar larvae may restrain their larger aphid prey with silk prior to attacking them (Hall, unpublished observations).
Some harvester caterpillars cover themselves with the remains of woolly aphids they have eaten. The carcasses are tied on with silk, perhaps to protect the caterpillars from predacious ants (that tend and protect the aphids) and other natural enemies. Harvester caterpillars are less likely to conceal themselves when their woolly aphid prey is tended by Camponotus and Formica ants (Youngsteadt and Devries 2005).
Lohman et al. (2006) reported that the caterpillars share part of the cuticular hydrocarbon profile of the aphids and may be protected from the aphid–attending ants and protected by the ants from other predators by this chemical mimicry. Although harvester larvae lack the secretory and call-production organs of other ant-attended lycaenids (Youngsteadt and Devries 2005), they are sometimes attended by ants (Wagner 2005). Interestingly, harvester pupae do have well-developed stridulatory organs (Douglas 1986). The function of these organs in the pupae is not known.
The proboscis of harvester adults is very short, and they do not feed on floral nectar. Instead, they feed on aphid honeydew, dung, sap, and also sip from mud (Scott 1986). Because the adults are small in size, spend most of their time in the locality of their aphid prey, have an erratic flight, and do not feed at flowers, they are not commonly seen. Therefore, they are probably perceived as being more uncommon than they actually are (Wagner 2005).
The common prey species in Florida are woolly maple aphids, Neoprociphilus aceris (Monell), that suck sap from earleaf greenbriar (Smilax auriculata Walter), saw greenbriar (Smilax bona-nox L.), cat greenbrier (Smilax glauca Walter), and bristly greenbrier (Smilax tamnoides L.), in the smilax family (Smilacaceae); as well as woolly alder aphids, Prociphilus tesselatus (Fitch) (formerly Paraprociphilus tesselatus Fitch) that feed on hazel alder (Alnus serrulata (Aiton)Willd.), in the birch family (Betulaceae) (Minno et al 2005).
bristly greenbriar and woolly maple aphids
hazel alder and woolly alder aphids
Authors: Donald W. Hall, University of Florida; Marc Minno, St. John's River Water Management District; and Jerry F. Butler, University of Florida
Photographs: Jerry F. Butler and Donald W. Hall, University of Florida
Project Coordinator: Thomas R. Fasulo, University of Florida
Publication Number: EENY-404
Publication Date: April 2007
Copyright 2007 University of Florida
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Department of Entomology and Nematology
Division of Plant Industry
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