Thank you Donna and all.
Blaine, When you've got a brug buzz does your hornworm beer taste like chicken? If no then would you please taste the worm right off of the brug tree and let me know if he taste like chicken?
It's ok that you mutilated my precious little hornworm. :) :) :)
I learned that you can tell the sex of your hornworn. And you don't have to spread his little legs. Incredible! Everything you wanted to know about hornworms but were afraid to ask ... rofl!
I believe this one is a boy. No kidding! It's that sticky out thing on his butt. The female part is more rounded.
Did you brush your teeth this morning?
ROFLMAO!! (and a coffee snort on top of that)
ROFLMBO!! Ohhhhhhhhh this is way too funny, Vicki you NUT!!! You wouldnt have to spread the little legs LOLOLOL...they are far enough apart! Poor thing is bold-legged lol! Do I see two horns on that thing???? How come in one pic I saw the horn... (which is what you claim to tell the sex from)....lol....in the first pic of this thread is red like in color and the lasst pic you posted with him shedding is goldish green? I wonder why?
I guess it is different lighting. Different days and different times of day but it is the same worm.
He shed his skin. That is why you see two tails. They eat their shed skins except for the head part.
It's the green appendage (for lack of a better word) down by the back legs that is his private parts. He does not wear bvd's because he does not know which way to turn them.
Do you think he's a boxer or bvd's kinda worm? He'd look kinda crute in some bvd's to me, whatcha think?
LOLOLOL *spew'd my coffee* !!!!! when I read, "It's the green appendage (for lack of a better word) down by the back legs that is his private parts. He does not wear bvd's because he does not know which way to turn them." I was rollin' round in my chair laughin'!
Oh my this thread is killing me, now we are sexing a worm, let's hope that the female isn't around or we might get pic's of the mating ritual. This has been so much fun.
JoAnn
Oh goodie! Now that's an idea! LOL Hmmmm Leaves one to ponder.....
OH YUCK ....this one has major problems!
Some info....thought it was interesting....
If it weren't for the silky white blobs, the first feature you might notice is the series of "eye spots" (actually breathing holes), seven of which are topped with white-and-blue slash lines. These lines break up the shape of this sphinx moth caterpillar, which otherwise might be hard to miss since it grows to six inches long.
And then you notice that red, nasty stinger-looking thingy that curves up from its butt. The head is at the other end, by the three pairs of true legs. Lots of people, and some potential predators, are reluctant to tangle with this caterpillar because of that "stinger." Actually it's all bluff. The horn is harmless.
This caterpillar eats the leaves of tomato, potato, and other plants of the nightshade family. At maturity, successful hornworms burrow into the soil to escape predators, pupate, and turn into sphinx moths. The moths are sometimes mistaken for hummingbirds; they dart from flower to flower at dusk. Long tongues enable them to pollinate such specialized blossoms as the prairie white-fringed orchid.
But the hornworm shown here will not graduate to experience the miracle of flight. Some weeks earlier it had been attacked by a parasitic wasp, which injected eggs under its skin. The little baby wasps ate much of the inside of the caterpillar before crawling back out and spinning their own cocoons, which they attached to their host.
It's a bug-eat-bug world!
now there's something I've read about but never seen. Thats a great shot.
No wonder the Monsters hide in the Mist.
I have seen that but never knew what it was, now I know.
JoAnn
Nasty eh?
I can't believe I am actually reading all about this critter, but now Vicki, thanks to you lol...I am
Here's the complete cycle of this critter....great shot I think.
Manduca sexta
A caterpillar, pupa and adult of Manduca sexta are shown sitting on a tobacco leaf, the natural food for this insect. A related and very similar looking insect eats tomato. The caterpillar in the picture is not a normal color as it has been raised in a laboratory on artificial food. The caterpillar would normally be the color of the leaf. The caterpillar's blood contains a blue colored protein called insecticyanin, which is why the caterpillar in the picture is blue. When the caterpillar eats the leaf, it ingests yellow carotanoid molecules; these yellow molecules bind to the blue proteins creating a green color (yellow + blue = green). This makes the caterpillar difficult to see by birds looking for a tasty treat.
Interestingly, the nicotine in the leaf is normally toxic, but the caterpillars have a mechanism for selectively sequestering and secreting the nicotine. Perhaps the tobacco companies will offer smokers the chance to become genetic altered to contain insect genes to encode and express nicotine secreting proteins in their kidneys so that they can smoke more. Won't help with cancer but at least it would keep them from becoming adicted... Hmmm...
What a fascinating thread! And V8, guess after all that chewing he did, a sense of humor has to come into play. That first shot looks like he's rearing up and getting ready to take off for round 2 of the feast (or 3 or 4 or...)
nice shots!
Blaine, I wish I could take credit for them LOL but I can't, I just went on this quest to look at pics of them and learn alittle cos' Vicki peaked my interest, this is one I found. Oh no, you should see the pics I take LOL....they don't come close to your's!
lol
Julie you've been busy! I love it that you took such an interest!
I am so bored with my brugs right now. Nothing is in flower except for the one wormie is eating of course. Keeping track of this hornworm has been a blessing during my boredom. I've learned so much about his life in a brugmansia.
CalifSue he is devouring everything in his path. Leaves, flowers and even the nubbies on the brug bark. I'm glad there is only one of them. And I'm glad the brug is not a special one ... lol! I'd throw him in the canal before I'd let him eat one of my treasures.
LOL.. I haven't commented before since the only one I ever found before was on my favorite tomatoes and.. he took a nice soapy bath. (I call it a He but I had not recieved my "Sexing Hornworms 101" primer from Vicki yet so I don't know for sure)
shoot i think a spinx moth colony lives at my house. i took a total of twenty of in two days. i have tomatoes and Daturas they seem to be eaying to the ground.
i carry them ober to the vacant lot across the street. i hate to kill them. it gets fustarting though. one plant is totally gone
but i love the moths.
what type of plants do they eat besides brugs dats and tomatoes??
I'll just bet he enjoyed that soapy bath. ha!
They eat pepper, tobacco and plants in the same family. I've thrown a few irritating caterpillars into my neighbors yard but not a hornworm yet. This is the first time a baby hornworm has survived to grow up. I am guilty in the past of squishing them.
Supposedly when it is time for him to bury himself for the big change to a moth he will get a blue line down his back. When you see that line it is a sign that he is going to disappear and be just a worm memory.
I am naming the poor brug it is feeding on "Shredded Green!" ... lol!
I just had to bring this over to show you guys, it's adorable and very inspiring to see :-)
http://davesgarden.com/forums/t/536331/
Hugs
Julie
Thats a great series of pictures.. and story.
Thankies :-)
EWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW
lol! Another Admirerer I see heheh
too cute!!
Thats one way of pruning your brugs so the blooms aren't hidden.
I'd say he is exhausted from eating but I'm sure he is out there right now washing it all down with a Bud. lol! I thought about nailing him to the fence today but I'm too attached to hurt him.
I'd be pouring a little Bud on the ground in his memory up here. Done crossed the line!
Ahhh, there he goes, kicking back to stretch out and sun that full belly of brug and Bud!
Thanks for the entertainment. he got a name yet? We can all give suggestions I am sure.
If it was a brug that mattered I sure wouldn't allow him to get away with it that's for sure. Lucky him he can eat the entire plant if he wants too. :)
His name is Blaine the Bud Sucker :)
Hmmm, seems I have heard of him somewhere before! LOL
Perfect!
I think there is a site somewhere out there where you can register your worm names. Blaine BS is a mighty fine worm. :)
oh thank you, thank you.
I was thinking more along the lines of 'Dead Meat'
He wouldn't have made it this long at my house. I'd be afraid that the final outcome would be a platoon of them.
Vicki, while perusing a garden book I just found out that the hornworm is a favorite of Cardinals. Might be why I haven't seen on my lot for 3 years. I've had a lot more birds but it's also been that long 2 pairs of cardinals spend a lot of time in the back yard and fruit trees.
How interesting about the Cardinals and hornworms. I love Cardinals. I used to see so many of them year round in TN. I guess it was because the area was so lush with trees.
In my new home in fI I have too few trees. Small birds do not hang around very long. I saw a pair of Cardinals for a couple of days in early Spring and then they moved on.
Shirley it will probably be my luck that just because I let this worm live he will bless me with many grandchildren. I'm prepared! I know what the eggs look like now and it will be much easier to get rid of them than to have to kill the caterpillar. After watching this worm grow and handling him, and watching all the funny things he does, and just being in awe of God's creativity there is no way I could ever kill a hornworm caterpillar again.
..... So! I've decided to go into the hornworm business. For $1539.05 you too can own a hornworm and name him! Sorry! We are not responsible for any damages done when the envelope he is shipped in passes thru the Postal xray machines! ... ha!
