Fabulous Green Sphinx Moth

Fabulous Green Sphinx Moth
Fabulous Green Sphinx Moth
Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Sphingidae
Genus: Tinostoma
Rothschild & Jordan, 1903
Species: T. smaragditis
Binomial name
Tinostoma smaragditis
(Meyrick, 1899)[1]
Synonyms
  • Deilephila smaragditis Meyrick, 1899

The Fabulous Green Sphinx Moth or Fabulous Green Sphinx Of Kauai (Tinostoma smaragditis) is a species of moth in the Sphingidae family. It is monotypic within the genus Tinostoma.[citation needed] It is endemic to the Hawaiian Islands and was thought to be extinct until it was rediscovered in 1998.

Its natural habitats are dry and lowland moist forests. It is threatened by habitat loss.

History

Entomologist B. Preston Clark, who had all but a few of the world's known Sphingidae in his collection, for long had a standing offer of one hundred dollars for a specimen of this moth. In 1919, he even sent August Kusche on a special expedition to Kauai to search for it. Kusche spent from January to April 1919 searching in the area from Kokee to Kaholuamano without collecting the moth. He returned to the area in August and September, and renewed the search in April of 1920. It was not found. Kusche reported that, during August and September, he had reared 22 caterpillars which he considered to be those of the green sphinx. He said that he had found the caterpillars on Lysimachia hillebrandi. However, Kusche never produced an adult. He was recalled to California by illness in the family, and he reportedly left the pupae on Kauai because he thought that "bringing them down from the high altitudes would kill them." He also confided in local entomologists that he had seen the moths flying about Metrosideros trees, but that they were always too high for him to capture.

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