Gen. PHAL^NA. Fam. BOMBYX. 

 Bombyx Lemnce. PI. 6. 



SPECIFIC DESCRIPTION. 



Bombyx with the anterior wings of the male something hooked at the tips, of a yellow red colour, 

 and a grayish bar across, waving towards the tip, somewhat curved, and bounded by a chesnut 

 coloured, and a black line: the posterior wings reddish and a little angular, with a double 

 wave in the middle, and a snip near the abdomen. The female dusky gray, with a darker 

 band on the anterior wings, and a waving line of brown near the end : and the posterior wings 

 plain brown. The anus dusky buff colour and tufted. 



The larva of this Bombyx feeds on the leaves of the plant here figured, the 

 Eucalyptus. It's habits are singular. A great number of the larvae spin 

 themselves a large white web at the foot of the tree, and under this web they 

 live in an amicable society. This web is a complete purse or bag, with many 

 partitions or floors within, serving to shelter them alike from the heat of the 

 sun, the descending torrent, and the attacks of divers enemies. On the parti- 

 tioning webs within this purse the larvae stow themselves, and lie inactive 

 during the whole of the day, till sun-set; when they sally forth in troops tip 

 the trunk of the tree, swarming over every branch, and almost every twig. 

 At sun-rise they are seen retiring to their strong hold, the works of which they 

 regularly and unitedly extend, as they increase in bulk; until the hour of trans- 

 formation arrives, when they desert the old social habitation, and separating' 

 every individual in some convenient place spins a cone or web of a dusky 

 colour and loose texture, in which it changes to a pupa, generally in Ja- 

 nuary; and remaining in that state thirty days, the moth is on the wing in 

 February. The female is shown at 4 and 5; the male at 3; the pupa in it's 

 cone, at 2; and the larva at 1. They inhabit forests. 



Obs. This moth is of the same class as the Silkworm, the culture of which gives rise to one of 

 the greatest manufactures perhaps known among men; and we think, from some traits in the 

 natural history of this insect, it might perhaps outstrip in utility the silkworm at present culti- 

 vated tenfold. If any ingenious mechanic could find out a mode of spinning a thread from a fluff 

 silk, or a web of the above description, here is an insect, the larvae of which, living in societies, 

 spin a white and extensive fabric in away and situation convenient to the hand of man; who, 

 after they had been plundered of the first, would spin again and again, so that the silken web 

 might be gathered, perhaps to advantage, several times in a week, which is not the case with the 

 cultured silk-worm, which spins but once, and then a small cone only. 



