Tomato hornworm |
Tomato and tobacco hornworms are closely related and both eat tomato plants. They are those big fat green worms with a "horn" on the butt. Their scientific names are Manduca sexta ( tobacco, most common) and Manduca quinquemaculata ( tomato). When they finish devouring your tomatoes they drop to the ground and make a chrysalis in the soil. They mature into a big gray moth called a hawkmoth, NOT A HUMMINGBIRD MOTH.
There are several species of hummingbird moths, those little day flying moths that can hover and look somewhat like a hummingbird. The most common one is the White Lined Sphinx moth -Hyles lineata. Their caterpillars do not eat tomato plants, but feed on a variety of plants like apples, grapes, peonies and four o clocks. Some species have a little horn but the caterpillars are smaller and do not look like hornworms. They are what turns into the moth that looks like a hummingbird and is often called the hummingbird moth.
Let me repeat this - TOMATO HORNWORMS DO NOT TURN INTO HUMMINGBIRD MOTHS!
So do not rescue tomato/tobacco hornworms. Squish them. Each one of them will make a whole lot more hornworms. They are not what we consider a beneficial insect.
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