It takes 70–85 days to progress from an egg to the adult, depending on the temperature and humidity. The female releases pheromones that attracts the male so they can mate.
Egg The female lays up to 120 eggs, and may place their eggs anywhere. The egg is oval-shaped, ; whitish gray, and firmly stuck to branches or sides of the cage that the female had been kept in. Caterpillars, long, hatch after 10–14 days, the warmer and the higher the humidity, the quicker it happens.
Larva The newly hatched larva is black with hairs. It sheds its skin four times in its larval stage. In the first
instar, it is initially black but becomes a deep red-brown as it grows. In the second instar, it continues to lighten to an orange-brown. In the third instar, it changes into a beautiful green with white stripes and silver/gold metallic reflective markings on the sides of the tubercles. Above the thoracic segments there is a stripe of white, black and red which can be opened and closed to show or hide the
aposematic colouration. It is hairy in all its stages, and it feeds on pine trees. The fully grown caterpillar is long. It spins its brownish silk cocoon on the ground among moss or among pine needles. They are easy to rear as long as they eat in their first instar, and disease is avoided. The species comes from high mountainous regions, so it is quite cold hardy. It is best reared indoors, sleeved on a small pine tree.
Pupa The pupa is about long, and the imago emerges from the cocoon after anywhere from about four to six weeks, depending on the temperature and humidity. In winter months, this development period can be prolonged until temperatures return to well above freezing, exhibiting a phase of diapause not unlike that of other high-altitude species.
Adult An adult moth's life is short, no longer than 10 to 12 days (females live longer due to the fact that the female sits still waiting for a mate). Pairing is easy in a medium-sized cage. With one female and one to two males per cage. A beautiful hybrid with
Graellsia isabellae was obtained by a team of French entomologists (D. Adés, R. Cocault, R. Lemaitre, R. Zaun and R. Vuattoux). ==Host plants==