These pictures show how a Bagworm caterpillar builds tiny ‘log cabins’ out of twigs and leaves to hide from predators as it transforms into a moth. The ingenious caterpillars get a tiny foot on the property ladder by ᴀssembling the twigs into a pyramid where they can sleep in comfort during their pupa stage.
The ‘log cabins’ are perched on branches or leaves until their owners emerge and face the world as a fully-fledged Psychidae moth. There are more than 1,200 species of the moths in the world and they are all experts at building themselves little hideaways while they sleep in their silk cocoon.
These pictures were taken in Pu’er, southern China, by Australian expat John Horstman. ‘The symmetry and precision of the “log cabins” makes them visually exquisite and unnatural-looking,’ he said. ‘Some individuals are better architects and technicians than others, but they can be meticulous, some build straight vertically, others in a perfect Fibonacci spiral.’
He added: ‘Bagworms in general are poorly understood, apart from a handful of species that agricultural and garden pests. ‘This particular species’ life history is unknown, but presuming they follow the typical life history, they spend their multiple caterpillar stages inside the case, grazing the leaf surface when small, progressing to the full leaf thickness, adding the vegetation to their basic silken sleeve as they grow, before pupating within.’