this post was submitted on 14 Aug 2023
13 points (100.0% liked)
bugs
337 readers
1 users here now
A casual place for Arthropoda.
Submission Examples:
- Share a cool picture of a bug.
- Ask about cockroaches.
- Tell a story about a scary wasp.
- Solicit amateur identification.
Rules:
- Relate posts to Arthropods.
- Note if an ID is keyed or a guess.
- If bit/stung, get medical help!
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
I believe now this is a Tomato Looper, aka Golden Twin-spot moth
Chrysodeixis chalcites.
From a 12yo reddit post with a very very similar larvae on tomato plants, somebody said it was a cabbage looper (wiki).
But after chancing a search for "tomato looper" I finally found a different species with a very very similar larvae and from there a name and good photo for the moth, Golden Twin-spot.
Now to find how to save the plants!..
Thank you tracking this down & following up! I was convinced it was a Regal Moth.
Hope your tomato plants survived!
Thanks! Seems like handpicking the larvae on the first generation was not thorough enough. Now it's a horde. Today it's looking bleak for one of the 4 plants ':)
The consumption of leaves is astonishing.
On the positive, this has been a good science project for my 5 yo. Catching larvae and pupae, and watching the birthing moth.
We're not eating tomatoes (from these house plants anyway) but we're having some fun.
That Regal moth is awesome! The caterpillar too. And I think i'd surrender the tomatoe plants to them the first time I saw them around.