Epicallia villica Linnaeus, 1758 is a animal in the Erebidae family, order Lepidoptera, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Epicallia villica Linnaeus, 1758 (Epicallia villica Linnaeus, 1758)
🦋 Animalia

Epicallia villica Linnaeus, 1758

Epicallia villica Linnaeus, 1758

Epicallia villica is a moth species with distinct colorful wings, black hair tufted caterpillars, found in multiple open and wooded habitats.

Family
Genus
Epicallia
Order
Lepidoptera
Class
Insecta

About Epicallia villica Linnaeus, 1758

Epicallia villica, first described by Linnaeus in 1758, is a species of moth. Adult moths of this species have a wingspan ranging from 45 to 60 mm. Their forewings are black or greyish, marked with broad white and cream patches and spots. Their hindwings are a bright red or orange color, with black spots. The thorax is black, and the abdomen is reddish-orange. Newly emerged adult moths have bright scarlet highly coloured areas, which fade to duller orange as the moth ages. The caterpillars are black, with light brown tufts of hair, and their heads and legs are reddish. Fully grown caterpillars reach a length of about 12 mm. This species lives in woodland, areas with bushes and hedges, and sunny open grassy areas.

Photo: (c) Paolo Mazzei, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by Paolo Mazzei · cc-by-nc

Taxonomy

Animalia Arthropoda Insecta Lepidoptera Erebidae Epicallia

More from Erebidae

Sources: GBIF, iNaturalist, Wikipedia, NCBI Taxonomy · Disclaimer

Identify Epicallia villica Linnaeus, 1758 instantly — even offline

iNature uses on-device AI to identify plants, animals, fungi and more. No internet needed.

Download iNature — Free

Start Exploring Nature Today

Download iNature for free. 10 identifications on us. No account needed. No credit card required.

Download Free on App Store