A rare carnivorous caterpillar in Hawaii gets its food from spider webs, adorns body with uneaten insect parts

April 30, 2025 • 12:00 pm

This paper in Science (click screenshot to read) describes a very unusual Hawaiian caterpillar (the larva of a moth): it is very rare, found only in a 15 km² area of Oahu, patrols spider webs on the ground for its prey, and then affixes the uneaten parts of insects to its body, so it looks really weird.  Its rarity in both number of individuals and habits (almost no caterpillars are carnivores) makes it imperative to save the small area of its habitat, which, to use non-metric measures, is about an area the size of a square 2.4 miles on a side.

 

You can also see a writeup of this weird insect in the Smithsonian, from which I’ve taken a few photos that come from Daniel Rubinoff, the study’s first author of the Science paper. Click below to go to the Smithsonian article:

The caterpillar has the ghoulish name of the “bone collector caterpillar”, and its species, not yet named, is in the genus Hyposmocoma, a genus endemic to Hawaii that has radiated into over 350 species on the archipelago.  Here’s the adult of this species, which is also rare because only 62 species of its caterpillar have ever been found. Photo is by Daniel Rubinoff, a Professor of Entomology at the University of Hawaii.

(From Smithsonian article) A museum specimen of an adult female bone collector moth that was reared in the Rubinoff lab Daniel Rubinoff

 

But the weirdest life stage is the larva or caterpillar, which spins a silken web around itself that it carries with it, affixing insect parts to the silk after it crawls around spider webs eating dead or trapped insects. Look at this (photo from the paper).  You can’t even see the caterpillar, as it’s covered with scavenged body parts.

This part of the Science paper tell you how it does this, and suggests a reason:

When decorating their silken portable cases, the caterpillars are particular. Body parts are carefully measured for size before the caterpillar weaves them into its collection. Each prospective new addition is rotated and probed with its mandibles several times, and parts that are too large are chewed down to a size that will fit its case. If denied access to arthropod body parts in captivity, the caterpillars do not accept other bits of detritus, suggesting that they recognize and exclusively use corpses in nature and that this decoration is important to their survival. Given the context, it is possible that the array of partially consumed body parts and shed spider skins covering the case forms effective camouflage from a spider landlord; the caterpillars have never been found predated by spiders or wrapped in spider silk. Bone collector caterpillars have been recorded from the webs of at least four different species of spider in three different families, none of which is native to Hawaii, so adaptability to non-native elements is likely crucial to their persistence.

So it seems to be camouflage, as spiders have not been reported to go after these things, even though they hang around webs for a long time (they do move from ground web to ground web).  But this is just a guess at this point. It could also be protecting the caterpillar from other predators as well.

Here’s a bone collector caterpillar in a spider web along with a spider and its eggs; I’ve circled the caterpillar, which, as the one above, is covered with insect body parts:

(From the paper): Fig. 2. Rotting wood log broken open to expose a bone collector caterpillar resting on a clump of webbing next to a non-native spitting spider (Scytodes sp.) with its egg sac. The web is partially obscured by termite and other wood-boring insect frass.

As I said, this genus has radiated widely, and the authors did a molecular phylogeny of the group, showing that it’s most closely related to the cigar caterpillar:

(From paper): Fig. 3. Molecular phylogeny of Hyposmocoma lineages based on 38 genes and 82,875 aligned base pairs. The phylogeny was molecularly calibrated using age estimates from Kawahara et al. (17); 95% highest posterior density confidence intervals for the molecular dating estimates for nodes are indicated with blue bars. Outgroups are cropped, and the full tree is shown in the supplementary materials. Different lineages are indicated by their larval case type (8), and exemplar cases are shown on the right. Bone collector and cigar case species are the only ones that are carnivorous. Current terrestrial areas of the Hawaiian Island chain are shown in dark green; shallows that were once above sea level are shown in gray. The islands are placed along the timescale according to age and geographic position.

Although the paper says this: “The bone collector species is the only one known of its kind, representing a monotypic lineage without a sister species. Although it is related to the other carnivorous lineage of Hyposmocoma, their ancestors diverged more than 5 million years ago.” But the phylogeny clearly shows a sister species, the cigar caterpillar, so I’m a bit puzzled, unless “cigar” represents itself a whole group of caterpillars, in which case the bone collector is the sister species to this group. 

Since Oahu is only 3-4 million years old, the bone collector’s ancestor must have evolved on another island and then the adult (probably) made its way to the younger island to continue its evolution there.

Just two more show-and-tells. First, from the Smithsonian article, a series of bone-collector caterpillars. Since they adorn themselves with whatever is suitable in a spider nest, each individual will look different from the others:

(From Smithsonian): These six bone collector caterpillar specimens adorned their cases with beetle wings, ant heads, fly wings and legs, spider legs and other insect body parts. Their cases—the gray material seen through the detritus—are made from caterpillar saliva and silk. Photo by Daniel Rubinoff

And here’s a video of a bone-collector caterpillar, again taken by Daniel Rubinoff. It’s not clear to me whether it’s eating another member of its species (they are cannibalistic) or is chewing up insect parts with which to adorn itself.  But you can get a glimpse of the caterpillar’s head.

Just think about how many bizarre creatures there are like this yet to be found. Another reason to save as much natural habitat as we can.

 

16 thoughts on “A rare carnivorous caterpillar in Hawaii gets its food from spider webs, adorns body with uneaten insect parts

  1. Near infinite variations over time, sorted by reproductive success, eventually come up with crazy outcomes, it seems. What a weird, trippy place is this planet.

  2. Crazy stuff! A good example of “You are what you eat!”

    There’s a genus of snail, Xenophora, that embeds bits of shell and other debris into its own shell. Supposedly, the snail—like this caterpillar—chooses what to attach to the edge of its growing shell and manipulates the object so that it has just the “right” orientation. Go figure. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xenophora

  3. That’s an amazing creature. It makes you wonder what selective pressures from the volcanic Hawaiian islands must have coerced this caterpillar’s ancestors to evolve such carnivorous behavior.

    1. It may not be island habitats neccesarily but if I was to take a stab at why, I would say speed of mobility may be a selection pressure.

  4. Butterflies and moths are fascinating creatures. I saw a YouTube video showing pictures of caterpillars that were funny. A scientist thinks he figured out why the coca plant evolved cocaine. In parts of South America there is a species of moth that produces rapacious caterpillars that can devastate vegetation almost like locusts. The point of the cocaine is caterpillar repellent.

    Mammals mostly find cocaine a stimulant, but insects find cocaine soporific. The point of the cocaine is that a caterpillar climbs up onto a leaf, takes a couple bites, gets seriously stoned, falls off the leaf, and is too discombobulated to climb back up to eat more. The You Tube video showed me some SERIOUSLY stoned caterpillars.

    I guess that evolutionary strategy of the coca plant worked fine until 20,000 years ago when humans showed up and had their own ideas what to do with coca plants

  5. Wear parts of each of your victims – what an amazing form of street cred! This sounds like something an adult would do to look more impressive to a potential mate. It’s another thing to add to the list of ghoulish things that insects do to other insects. All to look like an unappetizing pile of dead stuff, apparently.

    Here’s the adult of this species, which is also rare because only 62 species of its caterpillar have ever been found.

    62 specimens, perhaps?

  6. Really wonderful. There are more than 300 species of this group on the Hawaiian islands, all (as far as I have read) endemic to these islands. THis is an amazing evolutionary radiation.

    It is worth mentioning that “bone collecting” is a widespread habit among insects. Lacewing larvae and their relatives are especially famous for this. Then there are the beetle larvae that cover themselves with their own feces. It is a strange world!

  7. Well, that was…something I’d never heard of before. Fascinating.

    Just think about how many bizarre creatures there are like this yet to be found. Another reason to save as much natural habitat as we can.

    Agree 100%. Unfortunately, the increase in human population shows no signs of ever decreasing (at least, until nature does it catastrophically). As I read somewhere recently, “the tragedy of unlimited reproduction in a finite environmental system”.

    1. An idea that goes back to Malthus. Yet so far, our population continues to increase.

  8. Fascinating!

    By coincidence I was discussing caterpillars with a friend this week as she’d seen a huge and amazing caterpillar on a caribbean holiday. We worked out that it was a Frangipani ‘worm’.

    I’ll send her a link to this article.

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