It looks to us like a rustic sphinx manduca rustica and bill oehlke s excellent website has photos of the caterpillar as well as the other stages of metamorphosis.
Hornworm rustic sphinx moth.
Commonly known as the carolina sphinx moth and the tobacco hawk moth as adults and the tobacco hornworm and the goliath worm as larvae it is closely related to and often confused with the very similar tomato.
Dear basil lady this is the caterpillar of a sphinx moth in the family sphingidae known as a hornworm.
They get their name from a dark projection on their posterior end and their use of tomatoes as host plants tomato hornworms are closely related to and sometimes confused with the tobacco hornworm.
The features that lead us to believe your caterpillar is a rustic sphinx are the numerous white nodules on top of the.
Please see follow up column.
The tomato hornworm turns into the five spotted hawk or sphinx moth not the beautiful hummingbird moth shown in the photo.
Sphinx moths use a wide range of larval host plants including both woody and nonwoody species.
The moths in this family are called hawkmoths and the caterpillars are often referred to as hornworms due to the horn shaped protuberance found on their posterior end wagner 2010.
Rustic sphinx moths are mottled and zig zagged with black and white or very dark brown and white markings except for three.
Manduca rustica the rustic sphinx is a moth in the sphingidae family figures 1 and 2.
The whitelined sphinx hyles lineata is the most common hornworm of colorado and by far the most commonly encountered hummingbird moth.
Others must eat the leaves of rose family trees such as plum cherry and apple.
Rustic sphinx manduca rustica fabricius 1775 family.
The rustic sphinx manduca rustica is a moth in the same genus as the tobaccofly tobacco hornworm and the tomato hornworm these moths are moderately large wing span from 3 1 2 to almost 6 inches with heavy bodies and are usually nocturnal feeding late at night.
890092 00 7778 manduca rustica rustic sphinx moth fabricius 1775 photographs are the copyrighted property of each photographer listed.
Manduca sexta is a moth of the family sphingidae present through much of the american continent.
The species was first described by carl linnaeus in his 1763 centuria insectorum.
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Larvae develop on a variety of plants but seldom do they significantly damage those plants considered economically important.
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