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For Insects, Spiders & Their Kin
For the United States & Canada

Species Eumorpha pandorus - Pandora Sphinx - Hodges#7859

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Classification
Kingdom Animalia (Animals)
Phylum Arthropoda (Arthropods)
Subphylum Hexapoda (Hexapods)
Class Insecta (Insects)
Order Lepidoptera (Butterflies and Moths)
Superfamily Bombycoidea (Silkworm, Sphinx, and Royal Moths)
Family Sphingidae (Sphinx Moths)
Subfamily Macroglossinae
Tribe Macroglossini
Genus Eumorpha
Species pandorus (Pandora Sphinx - Hodges#7859)
Hodges Number
7859
Synonyms and other taxonomic changes
Eumorpha pandorus (Hübner)
Orig. Comb: Daphnis pandorus Hübner, 1821
Syn: Eumorpha pandora
Explanation of Names
Greek pandoros (πανδωρος) can mean either "giving all" or "given all".
Pandora (πανδωρα) is the feminine form of this word.
Size
Wingspan 87-115 mm
Identification
Adult: forewing olive green with darker green apical patch and border along inner margin, broken near anal angle; pink streaks near middle of wing and at inner margin; double black discal spot; hindwing whitish basally, green distally, with two large black patches, and some pink at anal angle
[adapted from description by Charles Covell]

Larva: body bright green or reddish-brown with swollen third thoracic segment into which head and first 2 thoracic segments can be drawn; abdomen with small white to yellow spot on segment 2 and large oval spots around spiracle on third to seventh segments; whiplike horn of early instars replaced with button in last stage; thorax and anterior abdominal segments with dorsal black spotting
[adapted from description by David Wagner and Valerie Giles]
Range
e. NA (Maine to Florida, west to Texas, north to Nebraska and Wisconsin) plus Ontario and Nova Scotia
Season
mostly: May to October
larvae present from June to November
Food
Larvae feed on leaves of peppervine (Ampelopsis spp.), grape (Vitis spp.), and Virginia Creeper (Parthenocissus quinquefolia).
Life Cycle
one generation per year in the north; two generations in the south
Larva; pupa; adult
Remarks
An extra-spectacular sphinx moth.
See Also
Virginia Creeper Sphinx, also known as Hog Sphinx (Darapsa myron) is smaller, lacks complex pattern of lines and patches on forewing, and has orange on hindwing (compare images of both species at CBIF)
Print References
Covell, p. 40, plate 3 #13. (1)
Salsbury, p. 327--photo of adult (2)
Wagner, p. 16--photo of larva (3)
Internet References
Maryland Moths - Larry Line
Dallas Lep. Soc. - Dale Clark
Sammlung exotischer Schmetterlinge, v.2, pl.161, fig.3,4 - The illustration that constitutes Hübner's description of the species.
Works Cited
1.Peterson Field Guides: Eastern Moths
Charles V. Covell. 1984. Houghton Mifflin Company.
2.Insects in Kansas
Glenn A. Salsbury and Stephan C. White. 2000. Kansas Dept. of Agriculture.
3.Caterpillars of Eastern Forests
David L. Wagner, Valerie Giles, Richard C. Reardon, Michael L. McManus. 1998. U.S. Dept of Agriculture, Forest Health Technology Enterprise Team.