C. guildingi and Lepidoscia species are both thought to build conical cases covered in finely chewed vegetation. C. guildingi are thought to differ from Lepidoscia in attaching themselves to a support using the whole round mouth of the case rather than a narrow neck. They are also thought to make longer thinner cases than do Lepidoscia.
I collected 2 and have them in a case so we will see what happens.
I just checked the ones I collected and they have left the wattle and moved to the top of the case. Any tips on how to raise other than adding new wattle leaves?
Tips: keep them in an enclosure that allows air to circulate but keeps out parasitic wasps and flies . Check every day if any have eclosed. And patience: if they have an annual cycle, then little will happen before next spring
Thanks Don - they are in a case with a vented top in the laundry so should be safe from wasps and flies unless they were attacked before I collected them.
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