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Banded Sphinx Moth

Eumorpha fasciatus

Description:

The Banded Sphinx Moth (Eumorpha fasciatus) is a moth of the Sphingidae family. 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.[2] 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.

5 Comments

NicholasBach
NicholasBach 11 years ago

No problem. I have caught a few in the Atchafalaya Basin at Sherburne this year. I’m out of Baton Rouge.

KimChampagne
KimChampagne 11 years ago

:)

KimChampagne
KimChampagne 11 years ago

Thank's Nicholas

KimChampagne
KimChampagne 11 years ago

Thanks Andres....he has spurs on his legs too....he is beautiful...I've never seen one like this before.....:)

DinDjarin
DinDjarin 11 years ago

WOW¡¡¡¡
SPECTACULAR!!!!
LOOK THAT EYES¡¡¡¡
COOL¡¡¡
CONGRATULATIONS¡¡¡¡

KimChampagne
Spotted by
KimChampagne

Ville Platte, Louisiana, United States

Spotted on Oct 5, 2012
Submitted on Oct 5, 2012

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