File:Honey_Locust_Moth_egg,_Megan_McCarty135.jpg|Egg File:Honey Locust Moth larva, Megan McCarty136.jpg|2nd
instar larva File:Honey Locust Moth larva, Megan McCarty138.jpg|Last instar larva File:Honey Locust Moth chrysalis, Megan McCarty139.jpg|Chrysalis The
eggs are pale green and are laid in clusters on the host plant leaves. The young gregarious
larvae are pale green with four pairs of black thoracic filaments and a black horn on the end of the abdomen. They also have a lateral stripe which is mainly white. The older solitary larvae are grass green with two pairs of red horns on the thorax and one on the end of the abdomen. There are a number of silvered horns across the abdomen. The supraspiracular stripe is red and white. The body is dotted with white spots. The very similar-looking Bisected honey locust moth larva has green horns and lacks the red in the supraspiracular stripe. The dark
chrysalis is made in a cell under ground. It
hibernates as a chrysalis. The honey locust moth has three
broods per year, the first adults being grayish, the second yellow to orange brown, and the third being darker with more spotting. ==Host plants==