
Diphthera Hübner (1809)
Euglyphia Hübner (1820)
Diphtera Stephens (1850, emend.)
Noropsis Guenée (1852)
festiva (Fabricius) (1775)
hieroglyphica (Cramer 1777, preocc. [not Drury 1773])
elegans Hübner (1809)
fastuosa Guenée (1852)
Larval records from FSCA:
Florida:
Alachua Co. - Archer, Gainesville; Baker Co. - Macclenny; Bradford Co. - Brooker; Clay Co.;
Dade Co. - Miami; Escambia Co. Molino, Cantonment; Flagler Co.; Gadsden Co. - Quincy;
Gulf Co. - Apalachicola; Hardee Co. - Highlands Co. - Avon Park; Hillsborough Co. - Plant City;
Jackson Co. - Marianna, Graceville; Leon Co.; Levy Co. - Williston; Nassau Co. - Callahan;
Okaloosa Co. - Milligan; Orange Co. - Winter Garden; Polk Co. - Santa Rosa Co.; Seminole Co.;
Washington Co.
Georgia:
Effingham Co.
Costa Rica:
Guanacaste Province, Liberia
Ecuador:
Los Rios Province, Quevedo
Adult records from FSCA:
Florida:
Alachua Co. - Gainesville; Columbia Co.; Duval Co. - Jacksonville; Hamilton Co. - Jasper, White
Springs, High Springs; Highlands Co. - Sebring, Lake Placid; Hillsborough Co. - Temple Terrace;
Leon Co.; Liberty Co. - Torreya State Park; Monroe Co. - Key Largo; Okaloosa Co. - Ocean
City, Shalimar; Putnam Co.; St. John's Co. - St. Augustine; Sumter Co.; Volusia Co. - New
Smyrna
Georgia:
Lowndes Co. - Valdosta; Wayne Co. - Jessup
Louisiana:
Ascension Parish - Prairieville; East Baton Rouge Parish - Baton Rouge; Iberville Parish -
Sunshine; Lafourche Parish - Cutoff; St. John's Parish - Edgard; St. Tammany Parish - Abita
Springs
Bahamas:
Big Wood Cay
Mexico:
Mazatlan, Sinaloa
Larvae have white to cream colored bodies with a series of transverse black bands on the dorsal side with three or four distinct black bands to each segment, one of these bands being more conspicuous. The transverse stripes do not go around the entire body but rather they end in a ventrolateral longitudinal black stripe below the spiracles. The spiracles are surrounded by black coloration and resemble small black dots. The ventral portion of the abdomen is white with black thoracic and abdominal legs. The head capsule and anal plate located on the last abdominal segment are orange-red in color. Late instar larvae are approximately 4.5 cm long and 0.7 cm wide.
The pupa of the hieroglyphic moth is dark brown to black with the ventral part of abdominal segments lighter in coloration. The cremaster (a cluster of small hooks used to grip substrates for pupal support in Lepidoptera) has two spine-like processes extending out approximately 45 degrees. The oval cocoon is made out of thin, coarse silk with fragments of leaves and other plant debris and are spun in the crotches of trees. The pupa ranges in size from 1.5 to 1.7 cm in length. (descriptions taken from Benjamin 1922, Covell 1984, Becker & Miller 2002).
A parasitic wasp in the family Chalcididae was found on a D. festiva larva on mint in Venezuela (Teran 1980). The aposematic coloration of the larvae may be a warning sign of toxicity to birds, which have been observed feeding on the larvae and immediately spitting them out (Collins & Watson 1983, Becker Miller 2002).
Sterculiaceae: Melochia corchorifolia L. (chocolateweed), M. pyrimidata L. (pyramid flower), M. tomentosa L. (teabush, broomwood), Waltheria indica L. (sleepy morning), and Helicteres mexicana
Fabaceae: Lespedeza thunbergii (de Candolle) Nakai (Thunberg's lespedeza), Glycine max L. (soybean), and Schrankia portoricensis Urb.
Malvaceae: Malvastrum spicatum aut. non (L.) Gray and Sida sp. in lab rearings (Collins and Watson 1983, FDACS-DPI 1983, Poole 1989, Drees and Rice 1990, Zhang 1994, Becker and Miller 2002, Heppner 2004)
Other host plants mentioned in the literature include: Phyllanthus latifolius (Euphorbiaceae) (Heppner 2004), Boerhaavia diffusa (Nyctaginaceae) (Collins & Watson 1983), Morongia leptoclada Cook & Collins (Mimosaceae) (Poole 1989, Zhang 1994), Carya spp. (Juglandaceae) (Poole 1989, Watson & Whalley 1975), Ipomoea batatas (L.) Lam. (Convolvulaceae) (Poole 1989), Cocos sp. (Arecaceae) (Watson & Whalley 1975), Casuarina equisetifolia L. (Casuarinaceae), Corchorus hirsutus L. (Tiliaceae) (Becker & Miller 2002), and Lippia alba (Labiatae) (Teran 1980), and Solanum sp. (Solanaceae) (Dyer 1995).
Insecticides: Larvae can be sprayed with a bacterial spray, or more immediate results can be obtained from the application of various pesticides. Bacillus thuringiensis, a microbial insecticide, is a bacterium that kills only lepidopteran larvae. It has no known toxicity toward beneficial insects. When using an insecticide, target young caterpillars when they are the most vulnerable to chemical control.
Insect Management Guide for landscape plants
Insect Management Guide for sweet potatoes
Insect Management Guide for soybeans
Insect Management Guide for pecans
Authors: James C. Dunford and Kathryn A. Barbara, University of Florida.
Photographs and Illustration: Lyle Buss, Kathryn A.
Barbara and James C. Dunford, University of Florida; and Dan Clark, FCEPMT
Project Coordinator: Thomas R. Fasulo, University of Florida
Publication Number: EENY-326
Publication Date: May 2004
Copyright 2004 University of Florida
Featured Creatures
Department of Entomology and Nematology
Division of Plant Industry
Electronic Data Information Source