Hornworms:
Tobacco Hornworm - Manduca sexta (Linnaeus)
Tomato Hornworm - Manduca quinquemaculata (Haworth)
Dr. Phillip Roberts, Extension Entomologist, The University of Georgia, Department of Entomology, Tifton, GA 31793
Dr. Paul Guillebeau, Extension Entomologist, The University of Georgia, Department of Entomology, Athens, GA 30602
Order Lepidoptera: Family Sphingidae
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Description:
Adult: wingspan from 4 1/2 to 5 inches. Wings of tobacco hornworm are slate-brown; tomato hornworm, ash-gray. Tobacco hornworm has six, orange spots on each side of the abdomen; tomato hornworm has five.
Larvae: Green body with fine, white pubescence. Up to 3 1/4 inches.
Tobacco hornworm: seven diagonal stripes on each side; posterior horn curved and red.
Tomato hornworm: eight V-shaped markings on each side; horn is straight and black.
Hosts: Primarily solanaceous plants, including tobacco, tomato, eggplant, pepper, and some weedy plants. Tobacco and tomato plants preferred oviposition sites.
Damage: Strip leaves from tomato vines. May also feed on the surface of fruit. Damage usually occurs from midsummer to the end of the growing season.
Life Cycle: Overwinter as pupae in the soil. Moths emerge from early June to August and lay eggs on underside of leaves. Up to 2,000 eggs per female laid 1-5 per night. Eggs hatch in 1-2 days. Larvae feed for 3 weeks and pupate in the soil for about 3 weeks. Most eggs laid from August to early September.
Control: Larvae can be removed by hand in home gardens. Populations often controlled by parasitic wasps. Parasitized larvae often covered with small, white, spindleshaped wasp pupae. Do not remove parasitized larvae. If insecticides are necessary, organophosphates, carbamates, pyrethroids, and Bacillus thuringiensis are used.
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 Hornworm larva and damage on green ash Photo by: James Solomon, USFS
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 Tomato Hornworm Photo by: Robert Anderson, USFS
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 Tobacco Hornworm Photo by: David Jones, UGA
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In: Roberts, P. M. and G. K. Douce, Coordinators. 1999. Foliage Feeding Insects. A County Agent's Guide to Insects Important to Agriculture in Georgia. Univ. of GA, Col. Ag. Env. Sci., Coop. Ext. Serv., Tifton, GA USA. Winter School Top Fifty Agricultural Insect Pests and Their Damage Sessions, Rock Eagle 4-H Ctr., Jan. 20, 1999.
Selected References and Suggested Readings
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