ceanothus silk moth, photo by Joleen Lutz |
This green caterpillar will become a beautiful rusty-brown moth with dramatic white markings. As an adult it will be almost the size of a hummingbird. It's life as a moth will be fairly short because as an adult it does not eat at all.
white-lined sphinx moth, photo by Sherri Seymer |
Some other local caterpillars and their butterfly or moth adulthood.
mourning cloak butterfly and caterpillar
chocolate looper moth
what's that butterfly?
monarch butterfly
anise swallowtail
painted lady butterfly
3 comments:
I think the second photo is a red humped caterpillar, Schizura concinna.
Bugguide images here:
https://bugguide.net/node/view/22724/bgimage
This is a good catch. I think Cindy is correct. This second caterpillar could be a red-humped caterpillar, an agricultural pest. They are not typically seen in coastal Orange County. For more info see the UC Ag website: http://ipm.ucanr.edu/PMG/PESTNOTES/pn7474.html
We have a tree with about 100 of these in Lake Forest (Orange County) CA
Post a Comment