dcsimg

Saddleback Caterpillar (Acharia stimulea)

Image of <i>Acharia stimulea</i>

Description:

"
Category hierarchy: Interactions Among Species | Defense: Poisons & More
Description: The saddleback caterpillar is about an inch long, has a purplish-brown body with a green saddle shape on it's back, and has poisonous spines on four large projections (tubercles) and many smaller ones that stick out from the sides of its body. The poisonous spines are hollow and are connected to poison glands. Contact with them causes a burning sensation and inflammation that can be as painful as a bee sting. The ""saddle"" consists of an oval shaped, purplish-brown spot in the middle of a green patch on the back. Saddleback caterpillars feed on the leaves of basswood, chestnut, cherry, plum, oak, and other trees and shrubs. They are generally found in late summer.
Original date: 20040901

Locality: Latitude: 3.885150000000000e+001; Longitude: -7.729819999999999e+001"

Included On The Following Pages:

This image is not featured in any collections.

Source Information

license
cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
copyright
Thomas A. Hermann /life.nbii.gov
provider
National Biological Information Infrastructure (NBII)
original
original media file
partner site
NBII images
ID
26486828