Adults have been recorded on wing from March to May. There is one generation per year. The species is possibly involved in a mimicry relationship with Eterusia aedea.[2]
Macrobrochis gigas differs from congeners in the following morphological characters: orange head and collar; thorax black above with green metallic tinge and orange below; tegulae striped with orange; abdomen greenish black, the extremity and ventral surface orange; abdomen with white bands or lateral spots on the hind borders of each segment; forewing black with a green tinge, with a small white spot at the base, with a larger one beyond it, and a spot at the end of the cell and another below it; hindwing with the basal half white, the outer half black.[3][4] Mass aggregation and feeding behavior of this species adult and larvae observed in several sites in South India[5]
^Walker, F (1854). List of the specimens of Lepidopterous Insects in the Collection of the British Museum. Part I. London: Trustees of British Museum (Natural History). p. 976.