
A vulnerable Elephant Hawk Moth Caterpillar looking for a place to pupate.
The first thing that impressed me was the black and lilac eyespot and the strange head, extending like an elephant’s trunk (hence the name). The spike-like horn on its rear-end was also notable. Most impressive of all was, this brown/greenish sausage was an outlandish size, thicker and longer than my thumb with two pairs of fearsome eyespots on each side of its head. When I picked it up it contracted its head accordion-style to create a fearsome hooded shape like a small cobra.

Fearsome eyespots on each side of its head to ward off predators

Spike-like horn on its rear-end
Its conspicuous size made it particularly vulnerable to predators and I instantly could appreciate how its snake-like mimicry could warn off a hungry bird. This was the first Elephant Hawk Moth that I’d seen and it left a vivid impression on me (much more than any photograph or illustration seen in a book). I found its strangeness fascinating. This huge moth larva was pretending to be a snake to scare predators. This reminded me of the power of insects to also scare people. The entomologist Roger Key, despairing of our attitudes to them reported that a magnificent Pivet Hawk Moth caterpillar, a harmless, horned, green and purple wonder (much like the Elephant Hawk Moth) had allegedly terrorised a Leicestershire family who’d found it in their garden. The offending insect was flushed down the loo, a sad indictment of our attitude towards wildlife we mistakenly interpret as threatening.







Jane
August 19, 2021 6:59 pmmy cat brought in a strange looking item, I noticed it was alive and had a face that was similar to the cartoon Jimini cricket, after showing it to my neighbours we replaced it in a beech hedge as it appeared to need to go there, I shall be keeping a look out for it as it was a remarkable looking being. Out was the first I had seen and wondered if it had been dropped by a passing bird. would love to know if they are common in Gloucester.