Published

- 1 min read

The "Hummingbird Moth": It’s Not a Bird!

img of The "Hummingbird Moth": It’s Not a Bird!

🦋 The “Hummingbird Moth”: It’s Not a Bird!

You are watching your flowers at dusk. You see a chubby, fuzzy creature hovering over the blooms. It beats its wings fast. It has a long tongue.

”Look! A baby hummingbird!”

Actually… it’s a bug.


🔍 Identification

This is the White-Lined Sphinx Moth (or Clearwing Moth). It is an incredible example of “convergent evolution”—two different species evolving the same traits to do the same job.

  • Size: 2-3 inches (same as a small hummingbird).
  • Behavior: Hovers while feeding.
  • Sound: Its wings make a soft humming sound.
  • The Giveaway: Look at the head. It has antennae. Birds do not have antennae.

🌿 Is it Good?

YES! It is a fantastic pollinator.

  • The Caterpillar: It starts life as a large green Hornworm.
  • The Adult: It feeds on the same tubular flowers as hummingbirds (Petunias, Honeysuckle).

🌻 Attract Them All

If you want to attract both hummingbirds AND these cool moths, plant night-blooming flowers.

Don’t squash it! It’s a friend.

Enjoy the diversity!

Related Posts

There are no related posts yet. 😢