Sam Ferris of Judge Road in South Alabama called me this morning and said there were a pair of large butterflies hanging out in his yard and he thought it might make an interesting picture.
A butterfly with a six-inch wing span? Sounds pretty interesting and I had a little time this morning, so I drove out there.
After getting a picture, I drove out to the Interpretive Center at Genesee County Park to cover an event there. When talking with volunteers there, I mentioned the large butterfly and pulled the picture up on my camera.
A volunteer said, "That's not a butterfly. That's a moth."
It turns out it's a Cecropia Moth (Hyalophora Cecropia). I learned that the moth has no digestive system. Tonight, it will probably fly off, find a mate and then die. Typically, once they molt, they live about three days.
We had a male in our yard
We had a male in our yard yesterday. We did a little of our own research and found a great site with the whole life cycle. We had our moth around the yard for the day until he flew away sometime last night. He was almost 6 inches across. We took a few good pics.
Here is the link....
http://www.wormspit.com/cecropia.htm
Fascinating, Jodi. Thanks
Fascinating, Jodi. Thanks for sharing that link.
Well at least he gets him a
Well at least he gets him a little before he dies!!!!
I have seen one just like
I have seen one just like this at the children Strong Museum in Rochester at their ongoing "dancing butterflies" exhibit.