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Updated as per Hawkmoths of the World, Kitching and Cadiou, 2000, January 6, 2005 Updated as per The Hawk Moths of North America, James P. Tuttle, March 9, 2009 Updated as per personal communication with Jennifer L. Bundy, (Yuma County, Arizona), March 9, 2009 Updated as per personal communication with Jennifer L. Bundy, (Los Angeles County, California), April 27, 2009 Updated as per personal communication with Jennifer L. Bundy, April 1, 2011 |
This site has been created by
Bill Oehlke at oehlkew@islandtelecom.com
Comments, suggestions and/or additional information are welcomed by Bill.
TAXONOMY:
Family: Sphingidae, Latreille, 1802 |
MIDI MUSICcopyright C. Odenkirk ON.OFF |
James P. Tuttle indicates the populations from Nevada, previously assocatiated with E. phaeton, are more closely aligned with E. wiesti.
Euproserpins phaeton mojave, (Comstock, 1938), California, is same as Euproserpinus phaeton, according to Kitching and Cadiou (2000), but Tuttle (2007) retains the subspecies distinction. He indicates the more westerly populations (nominate phaeton) are smaller, with wider black hindwing bands and prominent back scaling of veins on ventral surface. The more easterly, desert moths (subspecies mojave) come from drier areas, are larger, with narrower black hindwing bands, and they lack the prominent black scaling on veins.
Jennifer L. Bundy sends these beautiful images of a freshly eclosed moths from Yuma County, Arizona. She writes, "I found a small locality of Euproserpinus phaeton larvae in Yuma, Arizona, March 2008. I was able to successfully get the species to pupate and eclose to adult. The adults show some real interesting maculation near to the mojave ssp. but abdomen like E. wiesti. The moths are a little bigger too."
Euproserpinus phaeton "mojave" male, Yuma, Arizona,
December 24, 2008, courtesy of Jennifer L. Bundy.
Euproserpinus phaeton "mojave" female, Yuma, Arizona,
January 2, 2009, courtesy of Jennifer L. Bundy.
The upperside of the forewing is gray with dark gray-brown at the outer margin and base. The median portion of wing may be dark or pale and has only a few dark gray lines. The upperside of the hindwing is white with a sharp black outer margin.Euproserpinus phaeton San Benito County, California, Pinnacles National Monument, March 18, 2004, Paul Johnson; NPS photo |
Macroglossa erato, Boisduval, 1868, California, is the same as Euproserpinus phaeton.
mojave, Comstock, 1938, California, is the same as
Euproserpinus phaeton.
Euproserpinus phaeton, Plum Canyon, ABDSP, 3 March 2005,
courtesy of Lynn & Gene Monroe, Granite Ridge Nature Institute.
The pronunciation of scientific names is
troublesome for many. The "suggestion" at the top of the page is
merely a suggestion. It is based on commonly
accepted English pronunciation of Greek names and/or some
fairly well accepted "rules" for latinized scientific names.
The suggested pronunciations, on this page and on other pages,
are primarily put forward to assist those who hear with internal
ears as they read.
There are many collectors from different countries whose
intonations and accents would be different.
I do not know the origin of "Euproserpinus", but the species name "phaeton" comes from the son of Helios and Clymene. Phaeton wanted to drive his father's chariot, pulling the sun across the sky. He could not steer it properly and was killed by a thunderbolt from Zeus before Phaeton could scorch the earth.
Euproserpinus phaeton "mojave" female, Yuma, Arizona,
December 9, 2008, courtesy of Jennifer L. Bundy.
Euproserpinus phaeton "mojave" female, Yuma, Arizona,
December 9, 2008, courtesy of Jennifer L. Bundy.
EGGS, LARVAE AND PUPAE:Females deposit eggs singly or in pairs on the underside of host leaves. Larvae feed on various plants in the primrose family (Onagraceae).Jennifer L. Bundy writes, 2009, "Ken Osborne assisted me with the pupation storage process by sharing info on a method he uses to successfully bury the pupae underground to avoid desiccation or death by pathogens. The Yuma, AZ, E. phaeton habitat consists of silty sand and extreme temps beginning in the Summer and extending into Fall. Here in Yuma, the larva burrows underground and pupates, so I would need to mimic an environment parallel to the pupa's natural state during pupation. "Utilizing Osborne's method, I was able to dig a hole in the backyard and bury the pupae, leaving them underground in their usual silty sand environment until next season. My plan was to dig up the pupae in Mid-December, but with the heavy rains we received late November, I decided to dig them up early and check-up on pupal development. It was a good hunch, because all were pre-eclosion. "Concerned about desiccation and understanding the need for humidity to trigger eclosion, I buried the pupae again. This time the set-up was in a large plant pot, using my backyard sand, and leaving the plant pot out in the sun. I placed a cage over the top to keep the moth from darting off. I checked that pot every morning, spritzing with a little water each day, and would finally find my first adult above ground basking in the sun nine days later. Rearing the larvae and getting the larvae to pupate was one accomplishment, but I don't think the pupae would have made it to eclosion without Ken Osborne's storage method."
Euproserpinus phaeton still inflating or waiting for wings to "set",
Jennifer wrote back: "I re-wrote and added soil depth (below). Note: this is not the depth they dig under natural conditions. I believe this
species digs rather deep underground, but I haven't been able to set up something to measure depth yet. I keep the pupae indoors through summer and fall.
They will burn-up at two feet underground, so I just keep them indoors and happy until late winter, when we get the rain.
"This is what I re-wrote:
"She is a female Euproserpinus phaeton I reared last spring from larva. I stored the pupa indoors for the remainder of spring, summer and winter in a small
rearing container. Once the [outside] temperature dipped in December, followed by a heat spike in January, I noticed wing maculation developing quickly. I placed
the pupa in my backyard flower pot (pupa placed in tiny chamber under 6" of damp sand) for three weeks during February. After seeing no activity, I decided to
dig her up just to check. I could see the white banding on her abdomen which is a good indicator of pre-eclosion. I placed the pupa in the fridge for a night,
to give it a good winter chill, then placed the pupa back on my desk, in the small rearing container, until I had time to bury it outdoors again. Few days later,
I heard a noise coming from my office desk, from one of my small rearing cups containing E. phaeton pupae. She was in the container, fully emerged from
pupa and running around in total darkness. I grabbed her up from the desk and took her outside. Soon as she caught the morning sunlight, she stopped scrambling
around and very quickly lifted her wings straight up while standing in the palm of my hand." Visit Euproserpinus phaeton "mojave" larvae and pupae, Yuma, Arizona, courtesy of Jennifer L. Bundy. Visit Euproserpinus phaeton "mojave" or nominate phaeton or euterpe larvae (all instars), Los Angeles County, California, courtesy of Jennifer L. Bundy. Jennifer writes, "First weekend of April, I hit the road in search of Euproserpinus phaeton mojave (either adult, caterpillar, or ova). My trip would end as far north as Los Angeles County. In one region of L.A. county, I sampled from 5 different localities (roadside, washes, hillside) and looking under every Oenothera (Primrose) leaf I could for ova. The problem is that Euproserpinus and Hyles ova are almost identical and both moths post ova under the leaf. With each tiny green egg I found, my only option was to take it home and wait to see what emerges. "I brought the ova home and set them up in cups labeled with locality markers. Of the estimate 150 ova from L.A. County, 149 were Hyles and only one would turn out to be Euproserpinus. "Being that the ovum is from L.A. County, and based on prior research, the species would have to be mojave, or nominate, and not euterpe. However, this caterpillar is rather colorful. Comparing my photos of this cat with Paul Johnson’s photos at Bill Oehlke’s site, it looks like euterpe. For those familiar with seeing phaeton and euterpe caterpillars in the field, please have a look at my shots and tell me what you think. Regardless of what species, I was sad to see the conditions of the habitat - there was trash piles everywhere and it's also a semi-motocross track."
I think Jennifer's images from Los Angeles County, California, are probably nominate phaeton, or just a normal variation in colour. They could also be
Euproserpinus euterpe, representing a slight extension of the published reports for this species.
Euproserpinus phaeton eating Dune Evening Primrose. Note the small "horn."
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