Guardian Nature School Team Contact Blog Project Noah Facebook Project Noah Twitter

A worldwide community photographing and learning about wildlife

Join Project Noah!
nature school apple icon

Project Noah Nature School visit nature school

casemoth larva

Description:

Members in the Psychidae family are known as case moths, bagworms or bag moths. The caterpillars are from small to large size. Most species the caterpillars live in a mobile case. The case is made of silk and plants materials or a few species mixed with grains of sand. Each species make their case in different shapes. Most of them feed on a variety of plants. When they rest they stick the top opening on stem and hang their bag vertically. The case has two openings, one at the top and other at the bottom. The caterpillar comes out from the top to feed and ejects the waste form the bottom end. The bottom opening, which is smaller than the top opening, is also the exit hatch for the emerging adult. We can sometimes see the empty pupal case left at the bottom opening of the case. (from http://www.brisbaneinsects.com/brisbane_... )

Habitat:

Observed at the edge of a vacant lot on the outskirts of a small city.

Notes:

Further reading http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bagworm_mot...

Species ID Suggestions



Sign in to suggest organism ID

2 Comments

Scott Frazier
Scott Frazier 11 years ago

Thanks Jakubko!

Jacob Gorneau
Jacob Gorneau 11 years ago

Spectacular, Scott!

Scott Frazier
Spotted by
Scott Frazier

Missouri, USA

Spotted on Jul 9, 2012
Submitted on Jul 18, 2012

Related Spottings

casemoth Young larvae of casemoth Cone case-moth bagworm, casemoth

Nearby Spottings

butterfly milkweed northern mockingbird Queen Anne's lace European honey bee, western honey bee
Noah Guardians
Noah Sponsors
join Project Noah Team

Join the Project Noah Team