(pictured), displaying the aforementioned behavior. Females lay their eggs within rotting logs and other soft substrates covered by moss Larvae were found within Singapore's Central Catchment Nature Reserve at two separate sites (the MacRitchie Reservoir and the Nee Soon Swamp Forest). In captivity, larvae were reared on live shrimp (
Macrobrachium lanchesteri), small fish, or tubifex worms (
Tubifex tubifex). It is believed that the larvae feed on the shrimp species
Macrobrachium trompii and
Caridina temasek, as well as
catfish,
cyprinids,
halfbeaks, and
tadpoles in the wild. The anatomy of the
labial palps suggest a specialization towards predation of larger prey items. Unlike the larvae of other members of the genus
Tetracanthagyna, the larvae of the giant hawker are
ambush predators rather than actively hunting their prey, concealing themselves by resembling a stick as they wait for prey. The larvae also exhibit ballistic defecation, whereby the larvae would shoot their excrement, a tactic likely to avoid detection by potential prey items due to a cloud of contaminant fecal matter. Orr
et al., in the first ever larval description for a
T. plagiata nymph, described the larva as a large elongate aeshnid larva. The outline of the larva was primarily angular, and it had a "distinctive, pronounced" sculpturing on its head. The banded coloration on its legs was the only deviation from its dark appearance. The larva's legs were short and robust, which were adapted for performing grasping. The larval mask (a hinged lower mandible also known as a "hinged labium") had a robust
prementum with distal expansion, and the short, thin labial palps had serrated inner margins along its terminal hook. Male exuviae were long, and those of the female were long. Compared to the larvae of related species
Tetracanthagyna waterhousei and
Tetracanthagyna degorsi,
T. plagiatas larvae had a more angular head. Adult dragonflies forage during the dawn and dusk and are
attracted to lights. Akin to other members of the family Aeshnidae, they display a
crepuscular lifestyle, flying during the
twilight period. ==Distribution==