Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Eumorpha fasciatus

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Kingdom
  
Class
  
Family
  
Scientific name
  
Eumorpha fasciatus

Phylum
  
Order
  
Genus
  
Eumorpha

Rank
  
Species

Eumorpha fasciatus Eumorpha fasciatus fasciatus

Similar
  
Eumorpha, Eumorpha vitis, Erinnyis obscura, Enyo lugubris, Eumorpha labruscae

Banded sphinx eumorpha fasciatus chowing down backwards


Eumorpha fasciatus (banded sphinx moth) is a moth of the family Sphingidae. It is found from northern Argentina, Bolivia, Paraguay, Uruguay, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador and Peru, north through Central America (Mexico, Belize, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica and Panama) to southern California and southern Arizona, east to Texas, Mississippi, Florida and South Carolina. Strays can be found north up to Missouri, Michigan, Indiana, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York and Nova Scotia. It is also found in the Caribbean.

Contents

Eumorpha fasciatus Eumorpha fasciatus fasciatus

Adults are on wing year round in the tropics, but in the north, there are at least two generations with adults on wing from the end of May to July and the end of August to October in South Carolina and from May to October in Louisiana. Adults have been recorded feeding on nectar of Crinum, Catharanthus roseus, Petunia and Saponaria officinalis.

Eumorpha fasciatus mothphotographersgroupmsstateeduFiles1LiveCar

The larvae feed on Ludwigia (including Ludwigia decurrens, Ludwigia erecta, Ludwigia leptocarpa, Ludwigia octovalvis, Ludwigia peruviana and Ludwigia repens), Cissus verticillata, Fuchsia hybrida, Magnolia virginiana, Parthenocissus and Vitis species. The larvae are highly variable in patterning and depth of colour. Pupation takes place in subterranean burrows.

Eumorpha fasciatus Moth Photographers Group Eumorpha fasciatus 7865

Eumorpha fasciatus chajar 14022014 con fr o


Subspecies

  • Eumorpha fasciatus fasciatus
  • Eumorpha fasciatus tupaci (Kernbach, 1962) (Galapagos Islands)


  • Eumorpha fasciatus Moth Photographers Group Eumorpha fasciatus 7865

    References

    Eumorpha fasciatus Wikipedia