Friday, 18 October 2013

Sphinx ligustri (Linnaeus, 1758)

Time for a moth.

Sphinx ligustri, Bosham, West Sussex, UK
Photographed July 2013 in Bosham, West Sussex, UK, Using Olympus E-420 DSLR with 40-150mm lens and 3 KOOD magnifiers.

This moth, with a twelve centimetre wingspan, holds the honour of being the largest fully native moth in the UK, the Privet Hawkmoth:

Sphinx ligustri
(Linnaeus, 1758)

I would formerly have assumed that everyone knew that moths were nothing to be afraid of, a co-worker's over-response to a moth (and later, an equally harmless beetle) has given me pause. 

With the exception of a handful of Asian owlet moths in the genus Calyptra, which will bite and feed upon humans on occasion, but do not seem to be vectors of diseases, moths don't - and generally can't - bite. Nor can they sting. Their hairs and scales - particularly in some of the more colourful species - can be an irritant, but outside of serious infestations of specific pest species in food storage, this rarely builds up to a concern. 

This particular species is completely harmless, and feeds on privet, lilac and ash. In addition to flashing a colourful abdomen when disturbed, males can also hiss; again, in response to alarm. The rather conspicuously pink abdomen suggests that eating them isn't entirely without risk. 

Anyway, with that, on with the taxonomy: 


- Sphingini 
- Sphinginae 
- Sphingidae   
- Sphingoidea   
- Bombycina       
- Cossina               
- Ditrysia                  
- Heteroneura              
- Neolepidoptera            
- Glossata                         
- Lepidoptera                      
- Amphiesmenoptera             
- Panorpida                              
- Endopterygota                            
- Eumetabola                                   
- Neoptera                                          
- Manopterygota                                    
- Pterygota                                               
- Dicondylia                                               
- Insecta                                                       
- Hexapoda                                                    
- Arthropoda                                                    
- Ecdysozoa                                                        
 - Protostomia                                                        
- Nephrozoa                                                                                                        
- Bilateralia                                                                 
- Eumetazoa                                                                  
- Animalia                                                                        
- Eukaryota                                                                         

I leave you with one more photograph to show the insect in context, not as well camouflaged if it might be if it hadn't mistaken a lamppost for a tree; 

Same date, place, and time; same camera with one less magnifier.
 And that is all, folks. 

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