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sl8

(16,252 posts)
Wed Nov 15, 2023, 09:42 PM Nov 2023

Weird caterpillar uses its old heads to make an elaborate hat

Weird caterpillar uses its old heads to make an elaborate hat

Meet the mad hatterpillar, the invertebrate that keeps its old moulted heads attached to its body to make a beautifully bizarre headpiece

By Gege Li
24 June 2020



Photographer
Alan Henderson


THIS caterpillar sports a unique headpiece: each ball is one of its old moulted heads, precariously stacked on top of each other.

As the caterpillar of the moth Uraba lugens grows, it sheds its exoskeleton – but rather than getting rid of the previous head section, it stays attached to its body to create a bizarre “hat”.

This has earned it the nickname the mad hatterpillar, after the Mad Hatter in Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll. Found in Australia and New Zealand, U. lugens is also known as the gum-leaf skeletoniser, thanks to the caterpillars’ tendency to demolish eucalyptus leaves down to the veins.

U. lugens moults up to 13 times while in its caterpillar phase, with the tower of heads starting to be built from the fourth moult. As the caterpillar grows, each empty head is bigger than the last.

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Weird caterpillar uses its old heads to make an elaborate hat (Original Post) sl8 Nov 2023 OP
much like a peacock "eyes" on their feathers lapfog_1 Nov 2023 #1

lapfog_1

(30,225 posts)
1. much like a peacock "eyes" on their feathers
Wed Nov 15, 2023, 10:15 PM
Nov 2023

this is probably an adaptation to fool potential predators to attack the wrong part.

just a guess.

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