Hummingbird Moth 1
by Debbie Portwood
Title
Hummingbird Moth 1
Artist
Debbie Portwood
Medium
Photograph - Photography
Description
This is my first ever sighting of an Hummingbird Moth! He/she is busy drinking sweet nectar from the Lantana flowers in my back yard. I love how their wings act and sound just like a hummingbird though they don't fly about so fast. I hope to see him/her many more times in the future.......................Wikipedia -- Hemaris is a genus of sphinx moths, consisting of about 17 species native to the Holarctic. Four species occur in North and South America and three are found in Europe. Their main host plants are herbs and shrubs of the teasel and honeysuckle families. Moths in genus Hemaris are known collectively as clearwing moths or hummingbird moths in the US and bee hawk-moths in Britain. .....................................Description - The eggs are small, spherical, and pale glossy green in color. Host plants include shrub and vining honeysuckles and teasels.......................The larvae are small, cylindrical, and covered in granules that often have small bristles. Most larvae are green, brown, and gray, but there are many color forms. All have a distinctive pale dorso-lateral longitudinal stripe from head to horn..............................The pupa is enclosed in a loosely spun cocoon, and is glossy in most species. There is a prominent tubercle or hook alongside each eye. The cremaster of the chrysalis is large and flattened............The imagoes, or adults, are small, diurnal moths that resemble bumblebees in shape. They are often mistaken for hummingbirds. The forewings are fully scaled, but in some species patches of scales are lost during the first flight, leaving a glassy hyaline area on each wing. The antennae are strongly clubbed in both sexes and each has a small, recurved hook at the end. The abdomen ends in a large fan of setae.........The genitalia of the male are asymmetrical; the uncus is divided into two subequal lobes and is sclerotized. The ostium bursae, or genital opening, of the female is angled to the left.
Uploaded
June 27th, 2015
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