Macroglossum stellatarum

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Hummingbird Hawk-moth

Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Sphingidae
Genus: Macroglossum
Species: M. stellatarum
Binomial name
Macroglossum stellatarum
Linnaeus, 1758

The Hummingbird Hawk-moth (Macroglossum stellatarum) is a species of hawk moth with a long proboscis, and regularly hovers, making an audible humming noise. These two features make it look remarkably like a hummingbird when it feeds on flowers. It flies during the day, especially in bright sunshine, but also at dusk [1], dawn, and even in the rain, which is unusual for even diurnal hawkmoths [2]. Its visual abilities have been much studied, and it has been shown to have a relatively good ability to learn colours [3].

Contents

The wing action is frozen in this photo by using electronic flash. This picture was shot in Hanko, Finland, latitude 60°N, on August 19, 2006, thus far north of the typical residential distribution.
The wing action is frozen in this photo by using electronic flash. This picture was shot in Hanko, Finland, latitude 60°N, on August 19, 2006, thus far north of the typical residential distribution.

The Hummingbird Hawk-moth is distributed throughout Eurasia from Portugal to Japan, but is resident only in warmer climates (Portugal, Spain, Italy, Greece, Turkey, North Africa, and points east). It is strongly migratory and can be found virtually anywhere in the hemisphere in the summer. However it rarely survives the winter in northern latitudes (e.g. north of the Alps in Europe, north of the Caucasus in Russia, etc.).

Moths in the Hemaris genus of the family Sphingidae are known as "hummingbird moths" in the US, and "bee moths" in Europe, which sometimes causes confusion between this species and the North American genus.

A Hummingbird Hawk-moth (adult), France
A Hummingbird Hawk-moth (adult), France

Two or more broods are produced each year. The adult may be encountered at any time of the year, especially in the south of the range, where there may be three or four broods. It overwinters as an adult in a crevice among rocks, trees, and buildings [2]. On very warm days it may emerge to feed in mid-winter.

The glossy pale green eggs are spherical with a 1 mm diameter. They are said to look like the flower buds of the host plant Galium, and that is where the female lays them. They hatch 6 to 8 days after laying [2]. Up to 200 eggs may be laid by one female, each on a separate plant.

Newly hatched larvae are clear yellow, and in the second instar assume their green colouration.

The larva is green with two grey stripes bordered in cream along the sides and the horn at the rear end typical of sphingids. The horn is purplish red, changing to blue with an orange tip in the last instar [2]. They feed fully exposed on the top of the host plant and rest in among a tangle of stems. Although dependent on warmth and sun, the larval stage can be as rapid as 20 days.

The pupae are pale brownish with a prominent, keeled proboscis, and two sharp spines at the end of the cremaster. They are enclosed in loose silken cocoons among the host plant debris or on the ground among leaf litter [2].

The forewings are brown, with black wavy lines across them, and the hindwings are orange with a black edge. The abdomen is quite broad, with a fan-tail of setae at the end. The wingspan is 40-45 mm.

In the southern parts of its range, the Hummingbird Hawk-moth is highly active even when temperatures are high, and thoracic temperatures above 45 °C have been measured [1]. This is among the highest recorded for hawkmoths, and near the limit for insect muscle activity

Larvae usually feed on bedstraws or madders (Rubia) but has been recorded on other Rubiaceae and Centranthus, Stellaria and Epilobium [2].

Adults are particularly fond of flowers with lots of nectar (e.g. Jasminum, Buddleia, Nicotiana, Primula, Viola, Syringa, Verbena, Echium, Phlox and Stachys [2]). They are reported to trap-line, i.e. return to the same flower beds at about the same time each day.

  1. ^ a b Herrera (1992). "Activity pattern and thermal biology of a day-flying hawkmoth (Macroglossum stellatarum) under Mediterranean summer conditions.". Ecological Entomology 17: 52-56. 
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Pittaway, AR. (1993). The Hawkmoths of the Western Palaearctic. Harley Books, London. 
  3. ^ Kelber, Almut (1996). "Colour learning in the hawkmoth Macroglossum stellatarum". J. Exp. Biol. 1119(5): 1127-1131. 

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