Gorgyra mocquerysii Holland, 1896
This species is widespread, but seldom common; it is found from West Africa as far east as western Kenya and south to northern Zambia (Evans 1937, Larsen 2005). MJWC reared a female in Côte d’Ivoire.
Food plants
MJWC found this species on Agelaea pentagyna (or near) ( Connaraceae) in Côte d’Ivoire (88/210). A final instar caterpillar and an emerged pupa were collected beside an open track in a patch of forest at Adiopodoumé, near the lagoon. The food plant had large, tough trifoliate leaves.
Leaf shelters
One leaf margin was extensively eaten 2/3 of the distance to the midrib distal and basal to the shelter, which was about ¼ of the distance from the base to the apex of the leaf; the shelter lid was turned over upwards onto the leaf, measured 20 x 15mm, and the edges had started to turn brown.
Caterpillar
The final instar caterpillar (Figure 16) measured 18mm when collected; head rounded, widest in bottom half, 2.35 x 2.94mm wide x high; dull light brown, covered with very short, fine, white setae; body yellowish green, yellower at anterior and posterior ends; anal plate brownish.
Pupa
13mm; abdomen pale, turning dark before eclosion (Figure 17); thorax and head brown; apex of abdomen curved down to cremaster; spatulate bifurcate frontal projection. The pupa eclosed after 18 days.