Birding Hocking Hills in Southeastern Ohio
I remember the first time I ever saw a Hummingbird Clearwing Moth. It was 19 years ago in the backyard of our first house. I was standing by a patch of Black-eyed Susans when he flew up to a blossom. “Ohhhh, a hummingbird!” I thought. Until I looked closer and realized it was most definitely not a hummingbird. I remember it frightened me in a “something’s gone awry in nature” way because it looked like neither a bird nor an insect, and to top it off, it had fur (or at least is looked like it did)! I watched him for a while as he quickly went from flower to flower, until it suddenly dawned on me that he might be a bee and have a really big stinger, so I high-tailed it out of there and called mom. I can’t remember if she knew what he was or not, but I do remember a few days later I read an article in the paper about Hummingbird Moths and have thought they were really cool ever since.
I found this furry-looking Hummingbird Clearwing
Moth (Hemaris thysbe) at the Clear Creak Metro Park
on the Creekside Meadow trail.
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Hummingbird Clearwing Moths are
often called “Common Clearwings.”
I love his little curled-up proboscis.
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In my new National Audubon Society “Field Guide
to Insects and Spiders,” I read that the wings are
“plum-red” to “brownish black” at first, but the scales
drop off after the first flight leaving the clear areas.
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Hummingbird Clearwing Moths can be found
around forest edges, meadows, and cultivated
flower gardens. They like nectaring on
Phlox and Bee Balm.
Check out this fellow. He’s smaller than a Common Clearwing and is called a Snowberry Clearwing Hummingbird Moth.
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Nectaring on Bee Balm, I found this Snowberry
Clearwing Hummingbird Moth (Hemaris diffinis)
at the meadow's edge on the Prairie Warbler trail.
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With such an interesting little
masked face, he's hard to resist.