Template:Short description Template:More footnotes needed Template:Speciesbox
Ceratomia catalpae, the catalpa sphinx, is a hawk moth of the family Sphingidae. The species was first described by Jean Baptiste Boisduval in 1875. Other common names are the Catawba worm, or Catalpa sphinx.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
RangeEdit
Ceratomia catalpae is a native of southeastern North America and can be located on catalpa trees that grow within this region. It can be found from Maine, west to Iowa, south to Florida, the Gulf States and Texas.
Life cycleEdit
Template:No footnotes From oviposition of the eggs to pupation, about four weeks will pass. Where multiple broods occur, pupae will eclose in two weeks, or when conditions are suitable. Adult C. catalpae do not reflect the wonderful colors of their larvae. They are a dull brown color lacking the show-off appearance of its larval stages.
EggEdit
Translucent, milky-white, green, or yellowish eggs are oval, being about 0.5 mm in diameter. Eggs are deposited in masses of 100-1000 eggs on the undersurface of leaves, while smaller masses are deposited onto branches on the catalpa tree. Eggs incubate and hatch five to seven days after oviposition.
LarvaEdit
The larval stage of C. catalpae is known as the catalpa or catawba worm. When first hatching, the larvae are very pale, but become darker toward the last instars. The yellow caterpillars will usually have a dark, black stripe down their back along with black dots along their sides. There is also a "pale" phase where the black striping is not as prevalent or missing altogether and a shade of white has replaced it. They grow to a length of about Template:Convert and feed on the leaves of the northern catalpa and, more commonly, the southern catalpa, also known as catawba or Indian bean trees. They are highly desired by fishermen as bait.
PupaEdit
Like most other Sphingidae, Ceratomia catalpae will burrow into the ground after its fifth and final instar in order to pupate. The larvae will go into a "wandering" stage where it leaves the catalpa tree and climbs to the ground to find a place to bury itself so that it may pupate. The larvae will then shed its fifth instar skin to reveal its pupal skin, which will be soft and almost translucent at first, but will then harden to a light brown for protection from the elements.
AdultEdit
The adult catalpa sphinx is brown with a circular band of dark brown or black surrounding its thorax. Each forewing has a small, dark mark towards the middle, with a white dot in the cell. The body is approximately 30 mm long. The wingspan is 65–95 mm.
- Ceratomia catalpae MHNT CUT 2010 0 480 - Marlton, New Jersey, Burlington Co, USA - Male dorsal.jpg
♂
- Ceratomia catalpae MHNT CUT 2010 0 480 - Marlton, New Jersey, Burlington Co, USA - Male ventral.jpg
♂ △
- Ceratomia catalpae MHNT CUT 2010 0 480 - Braxton W. VA. USA - Paratype - Female ventral.jpg
♀
- Ceratomia catalpae MHNT CUT 2010 0 480 - Braxton W. VA. USA - Paratype - Female.jpg
♀ △
Images of life cycleEdit
- Caeratomia catalpae first instar.JPG
Two C. catalpae in their first instar
- Catalpa sphinx larva pale.jpg
Early instar larva
- Catalpa sphinx larva dark.jpg
Middle instar larva
- Ceratomia catalpae.jpg
Catalpa sphinx resting
Food plantsEdit
C. catalpae can be quite harmful to the catalpa tree during large outbreaks. The first trial of aerial crop dusting was an attempt to control the catalpa sphinx. However, more recent research may indicate the caterpillars are not as harmful as once thought. The research of Stephen L. Peele, curator of the Florida Mycology Research Center, indicates that catalpa trees might be completely defoliated multiple times during a single summer yet still survive and return to full health, a process which, Peele says, no other tree could survive. "They always come back. They always look healthy," says Peele. "I have tried to understand the possible symbiotic relationship between the worm and the tree. There surely must be one."<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- Catalpa bignonioides, (southern catalpa)
- Catalpa speciosa, (northern catalpa)
Human useEdit
C. catalpae caterpillars are used as fishing baits to catch bass, bream, and catfish.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
ReferencesEdit
External linksEdit
- Catalpa sphinx, Moths of North America
- Ceratomia catalpae, Sphingidae of the Americas