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While visiting
a hardware
store four
years ago, I saw a large,
beautiful moth resting
on the wall near a light.
Though at the time I
didn’t know what kind
of moth it really was, I was amazed. I later
found out that it was a cecropia moth (Hyalophora
cecropia) and was in the family
Saturniidae, one of the largest and most
spectacular moths in North America.
There are more than 1,000 species of
this worldwide family, which contains
most of the largest and most beautiful
moths on earth. The largest one is the atlas
moth (Attacus atlas), native to India
and Sri Lanka to China, Malaysia, Indonesia,
and Thailand. The second largest
is the Hercules moth (Coscinocera hercules),
ranging from Papua New Guinea
to northern Australia. Both
species can have wingspans
over twelve inches. In many
genera, the adults have long,
tail-like hind wings, such as
the spectacular luna moth (Actias
luna), which is native to the
eastern United states and southeastern
parts of Canada. All Saturniidae have a
reduced or absent proboscis (tongue), so
they do not feed; and most of their natural
life spans last only a few days, just long
enough to mate and lay eggs. Like all
moths, female giant silk moths release a
pheromone (scent) that the males of that
species can detect from miles away. In
most cases, males have wider antennae
for detecting and tracking female pheromones,
and females tend to have reduced,
smaller antennae for host plant detecting
purposes.
As with most moths, many giant silk
moths are nocturnal, yet a number of Saturniidae
species fly during the day, such
as the buck moth (Hemileuca maia), which
is native to the eastern part of the US. In
many species, male and female wing colors
and patterns may be totally different,
like the promethea moth (Callosamia
promethea), which is native to eastern
North America. Others might be closely
alike and most species have a transparent
patch or eyespot on each wing. Many giant
silk moths hibernate over winter one
of two ways, either as a pupa or as eggs,
but both hatch in the spring. Some species,
in warm climates, brood and hatch
continuously.
Most Saturniidae larvae are large, and
the two largest caterpillars of North America
are the royal walnut moth (Citheronia
regalis) and the imperial moth (Eacles
imperialis). Both of these caterpillars
often exceed full-grown lengths of five
inches. They can be found throughout the
southeastern US. As with all butterflies
and moths, giant silk moth caterpillars go
through instars (skin molts). Most species
go through five instars, but a number of
larger species go through six.
Although most giant silk moth caterpillars
are harmless, a number of species
have stinging spines, such as the genus
Automeris. Some species can even become
minor tree pests, such as the North
American rosy maple worm moth (Dryocampa
rubicunda), which can sometimes
be so abundant that their larvae strip
young maple trees of almost all their foliage.
Another occasionally abundant giant
silk moth species is the striking great
peacock moth (Saturnia pyri), which is
widespread throughout central and southern
Europe, extending to North Africa
and westward to Asia, and is sometimes
a minor orchard pest.
Many parasitic insects attack Saturniidae
caterpillars every year, including
parasitic wasps and tachinid flies. Most
giant silk moth caterpillars spin and pupate
(the process of larvae forming pupae)
in silk cocoons, while other species
form their pupae in the ground (a pupa, or
chrysalis, is a thin outlined shell in which
a moth or butterfly forms).
Many species have been reared specially
for silk from their cocoons to make
fabric. This sparked an idea in the 1800s
to build a silk industry with the species
Samia cynthia in the United States, but
finding cheap labor to unreel the cocoons
proved impossible, and thus the business
failed. The moths were simply released
and have populated themselves along the
north Atlantic coast.
Most people think of moths as dull
and worthless “bugs,” but many of them
are day flying and, like butterflies, pollinate
an abundance of plants by feeding
on nectar and are an important part of our
ecosystem.
Jonathon Tubbs is a 14-year-old homeschooled
student from Michigan. He enjoys
camping and hiking when he’s not
collecting insects or photographing them.
Learn more at his blog, www.HomeschoolBlogger.com/mothman.
Copyright 2006. The Old Schoolhouse Magazine, Spring 2006, pages 126-127.
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