I’ve been
too swamped with showing some fabulous birds and critters to tour participants
in Costa Rica and Brazil these past five weeks to post to my blog. And the more
cool stuff I see, the more I have to blog about, and the farther behind I get.
Here’s a
very quick sampling of the sphinx moths (family Sphingidae) that I managed to
photograph and identify on the Costa
Rica in July tour.
Xylophanes
is the largest genus of sphingids, and I can usually recognize them by their
sleek, aerodynamic look, often with longitudinal lines and lack of complex
patterns.
Xylophanes libya has that classic look
and seems to be very common.
Xylophanes anubus is one of the duller
ones, but with enough pattern to be quite distinctive.
Xylophanes cyrene is a little more
colorful and has a gorgeous pattern.
I was surprised
to find that this one is also in this genus; it’s Xylophanes zurcheri. It comes last in the alphabetically organized
list for northwestern Costa Rica (http://janzen.sas.upenn.edu/caterpillars/checklists/sphingidaelist.htm),
so it took me a while to find it.
Adhemarius gannascus is a very large and
very common species.
If I can, I
usually grab any sphinx moth to get a photo of the hind wing pattern, which is
often very useful in the identification. Sometimes it’s strikingly beautiful,
too.
This big
dull one is Cocytius antaeus, closely
related to the hawkmoths in the genus Manduca
(to which the familiar “tobacco hornworm” or Carolina Sphinx belongs).
This
tattered one is Erinnyis ello, nicely
showing its hind wing without my having to grab it. It occurs in the southern
United States, with strays well north, even into SE Canada.
This
strangely shaped and very compact one is Nyceryx
tacita.
This last
one is Pachylioides resumens, the
only member of its genus.