Atlas moth caterpillars: Food for birds?

Posted by BESG on 23 January 08, Wednesday
Contributed by Jeremy Lee & KF Yap

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December 2007 was a time when masses of Atlas moth (Attacus atlas) larvae were seen munching through the crowns of the roadside tree, Senegal mahogany (Khaya senghalensis). Jeremy Lee reported hearing a low crunching sound as they work their way through the foliage, to totally defoliate a few trees along Loyang Way (above). There were hundreds of them and many ended on the ground below, to slowly die from lack of food.

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Those that remained on the trees soon turned into cocoons (left middle), hanging from the twigs like miniature roosting fruit bats, as Jeremy puts it.

Othere reported seeing the caterpillars at the Chinese Garden, Jurong and at Pulau Ubin.

The spate of wet weather may have triggered the egg laying. Whether this is so or not, December is generally the month when these caterpillars appear.

The larvae are large, growing to 7 cm long or more (left top). They make a juicy meal for any reasonably sized bird, especially when they are so conspicuous - when the tree is totally defoliated. Why then are there no reports of birds taking these juicy caterpillars – except for one lone record from Pulau Ubin of an Oriental Pied Hornbill (Anthracoceros albirostris) enjoying them?

Can it be that birders are less interested in observing a tree covered with caterpillars for potential hungry birds than a tree covered with birds?

KF Yap believes that something is definitely eating the caterpillars. He came across a batch of caterpillars happily munching away in a tree. He returned a week later to find not a single caterpillar around, not even a trace of the cocoons.

Images - caterpillars in tree, top and pupae (JL), caterpillar (YKF) and moth (KC Tsang).


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    Categories: Feeding-invertebrates

    1 Comment

    Comment by clarence

    Made Wednesday, 23 of January , 2008 at 11:12 pm

    I actually saw a long tail macaque feasting on these cocoons! I was at the Sungei Ulu Pandan prak connector opposite Dover MRT when I noticed the monkey grabbing them off the branches (of a wild cinammon tree). It bit off the top of the cocoon, then squeezed the poor cocoon gunk out, much like what one would do wth toothpaste, except it did it with it’s teeth. Then it would tear open the other end, and squeeze the other end out. It went around the whole tree, feasting on all it could reach (about 5). When it was done, it threw the cocoons husks on the ground, and then left to return to the woodland behind.

    It was morbid, but I was really happy to see these monkeys feeding off natural food rather than depend on freebies from ignorant food throwers..

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