Common Fruit-piercing Moth (Eudocima phalonia), family Erebidae, Cape York, QLD, Australia
As the name would suggest, fruit piercing moths pierce fruits with a barbed proboscis to suck up that sweet juice.
photographs by Daniel Meier
seen from United States
seen from United States
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seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia
seen from Hong Kong SAR China
seen from Poland
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seen from Poland
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seen from United Kingdom
seen from China

seen from United Kingdom
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seen from United Kingdom

seen from Australia
seen from United States
seen from Hong Kong SAR China
Common Fruit-piercing Moth (Eudocima phalonia), family Erebidae, Cape York, QLD, Australia
As the name would suggest, fruit piercing moths pierce fruits with a barbed proboscis to suck up that sweet juice.
photographs by Daniel Meier
Day 28 of #febugary2026 hosted by @eldiego.glez is Eudocima phalonia, the Common Fruit-Piercing Moth. Shown are two larvae and one adult.
Painted my two moths! No idea what the second one is... my guess is some kind of eudocima but I can’t find any in NZ that fit...
Eudocima salaminia
Eudocima salaminia - Green fruit sucking moth
Family: Erebidae
#1618 - Eudocima fullonia - Fruit Piercing Moth
There’s certainly been an absolute flood of Fruit-piercing Moths - adults and caterpillars - in the FB group I admin. It must be a very good year for Achaea and Eudocima species up in Queensland, if you get them mobbing oranges and fighting among themselves for access to unattended beercans.
Anyway, this particular caterpillar was spotted by Ashleigh Miller at the Sunshine Coast. The diet of the caterpillars includes the Coral Tree, and various vines in the unrelated Menispermaceae. The adults are an absolute menace to fruit, including Bananas,Lychees, and Longans, piercing the rind with their strong proboscis in order to suck the juice. The hole allows the entry of fungi and bacteria which cause the fruit to rot prematurely.The moth feeds at night, and can only be kept away from your fruit trees with the use of fine-mesh netting. Light traps are useless, as this species is not attracted to light.
The adult moths have mottled fawn forewings, and vivid yellow, black and orange markings on the hindwings and underwings. The also have small blue patches in the labial palps, but you need a good close-up of the head to see that.
The species occurs in Asia and across the Pacific from Hawaii to New Zealand and the warmer, wetter parts of Australia.
#1629 - Eudocima fullonia - Fruit-piercing Moth
Photo by Mark Nalder in Brisbane.
One of the Fruit-piercing Moths, serious pests of fruit and unattended beercans. The hindwings and underside are vividly marked in orange and black.
Cadeau pour une amie qui est en doctorat et qui travaille sur le papillon piqueur afin d’illustrer ses articles scientifiques ainsi que sa thèse, et qui m’a hébergé lors de mon voyage en Nouvelle Calédonie.