
This site has been created by
Bill Oehlke at oehlkew@islandtelecom.com
Comments, suggestions and/or additional information are welcomed by Bill.
TAXONOMY:
Family: Sphingidae, Latreille, [1802] |
MIDI MUSICcopyright C. Odenkirk ON.OFF |
The adult Nessus sphinx, which flies during the day and at dusk, has two bright yellow bands on the tufted abdomin. At rest, dark red-brown upperwings hide the red-orange median band and yellow spot of the hindwings; in some Amphion floridensis moths the median band may be very pale or almost absent.Image courtesy of John Himmelman, Connecticut, May 17, 2002. | ![]() |

Amphion floridensis, Florida, courtesy of Leroy Simon.
On May 31, 1999, after an exceptionally warm early May, I took a female Nessus sphinx nectaring (16 mm proboscis) on blackberry blossoms at 6:30 pm in Montague, Prince Edward Island. The female was at first placed in a brown paper grocery bag where she did not oviposit.
Then I fed her a 10% sugar/honey water solution and placed her in an enclosure consisting of one six gallon clear plastic tub inverted over another with a young Virginia creeper vine growing from a February cutting. I also placed a grape cutting (just in water) and some blackberry blossoms in the enclosure.
Daily I hand-fed the female a ten percent sugar-water solution with a bit of dissolved honey, and during the next five or six days she deposited approximately 85 eggs, predominantly on creeper but some on grape and even a few on blackberry foliage. | ![]() In the above scan, shiny traces of emerged eggs remain, and decay has already set in around a hole nibbled from leaf underside. |
Cuttings of creeper were taken and larvae were easily removed from old foliage with fingers. Larvae seemed content to eat wilted leaves rather than move to fresh food.Rearing was done in several of the six gallon containers and growth was quite rapid. To the right, fourth instar floridensis one month ex egg. |
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By July 12, larvae had entered final moult and colour change from yellow-green to light brown was rather striking. The larvae would feed voraciously at night and hide along the brown creeper stems by day.From New York northward there is but a single brood from April til July. Double brooding (March-May and July-September) starts in coastal South Carolina, and there are as many as six broods in Florida and Louisiana from February-September. |
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Favorite nectar sources for the adults, which are frequently found in forest clearings, streamsides, and in the suburbs where larval hosts have been introduced, are lilac (Syringa vulgaris), herbrobert (Geranium robertianum), beauty bush (Kolkwitzia amabilis), mock orange (Philadelphus coronarius), and Phlox.My blackberry blossoms nourished floridensis as well as Hemaris thysbe and several butterfly species. |
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Planting any of the
above in proximity to creeper or grape will afford this
species a welcome habitat.
In additon to Virginia creeper
larvae accept Grape (Vitis), ampelopsis
(Ampelopsis), and cayenne pepper (Capsicum).
In July of 2000 I found a larvae feeding on fireweed (Epilobium) with my indoor-reared Hyles gallii larvae. The larva evidently was introduced to the container from food gathered for the gallii. The floridensis larva progressed nicely to normal size.
On July 18, 1999, a few of the larvae left the foliage and became quite moist as they crawled along bottoms of the containers looking for soft earth in which to pupate.
Typically these larvae pupate in shallow underground chambers. I simply removed them to "pupation buckets", empty five gallon buckets with several layers of paper towels along the bottom. Buckets were kept covered, warm, and in a dark place and pupations began on July 22.Pupae are at first quite soft and light in colour and should not be handled for several days until shell has hardened and darker colour has prevailed. For overwintering, here in the north, pupae will be stored in a ziploc plastic tub in the refrigerator crisper. |
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Amphion floridensis, Florida, courtesy of Leroy Simon.
The pronunciation of scientific names is
troublesome for many. The "suggestion" at the top of the page is
merely a suggestion. It is based on commonly
accepted English pronunciation of Greek names and/or some
fairly well accepted "rules" for latinized scientific names.
The suggested pronunciations, on this page and on other pages,
are primarily put forward to assist those who hear with internal
ears as they read.
There are many collectors from different countries whose
intonations and accents would be different.
Some of the early describers/namers chose genus
and species names indicating some character of the insect, but more
often, they simply chose names from Greek or Roman mythology or
history. Those species names which end in "ensis" indicate a
specimen locale, and those which end in "i", pronounced "eye", honour
a contempory friend/collector/etc.
In Greek myth, Amphion is the son of Zeus and
the twin brother of Zethus, with whom he built a wall around Thebes
by charming the stones into place with the music of his magical lyre.
The species name "floridensis" indicates the specimen type locality,
Florida.
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Please send sightings/images to Bill. I will do my best to respond to requests for identification help.