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Discussion

Lisa.Jok wrote:
1 hr ago
Hey @JonLewis, thank you for your ID and additional ant information 😀.

Papyrius sp. (genus)
ibaird wrote:
1 hr ago
Female E. caryotis may well have the marks on the inner margin, but I' m not sure that's a reliable characteristic alone because those marks may not always be visible. I seems to me the E. caryotis females also tend to have heads the same yellow colour as the forewings, whereas Tortrix/Standishana concolorana moths seem to have a darker or a contrasring orange looking 'head and shoulders'.
https://moths.csiro.au/species_taxonomy/epiphyas-caryotis/
https://biodiversity.org.au/afd/taxa/Standishana_concolorana

Epiphyas caryotis
WendyEM wrote:
3 hrs ago
I had just been noticing that the plain Epiphyas caryotis have some marks on the inner margin. A longer one adjacent to the tornus another smaller spot about 1/2 way along. SO maybe totally plain yellow torts like this are Standishana concolorana as these seem to be without marks there. The wings do seem to have a metallic sheen on BOLD (Hobern). see
https://bold-au.hobern.net/specimens.php?taxid=366794
as oposed to
https://bold-au.hobern.net/specimens.php?taxid=366843

Epiphyas caryotis
WendyEM wrote:
4 hrs ago
I suspect this is not a Cup Moth cocoon. It looks too flimsy and they attach to trees. It appears to be in spider web. Spider egg case ??

Limacodidae (family)
Mike wrote:
4 hrs ago
Seeds match Plantnet description - 3mm straight, glabrous, wrinkled. Longitudinal groove.

Cymbonotus preissianus
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