In between showers this morning (Yes, we have been getting
some wonderful, cooling rain!) I stepped out on the deck to refill the
hummingbird feeder. The first thing I
saw was a pile of green pellets littering the deck.
If you grow tomatoes you are probably familiar with the
sight, but for those of you who aren’t’ familiar, those pellets are frass, or
the excrement of the tomato or tobacco hornworm. This particular frass belongs to a tobacco hornworm, the
same one, or the relative of the one,
that dashed my hopes of a decent tomato crop this year.I planted the heirloom Opalka tomato seeds in the Earthboxes on the deck with such high hopes, and in June they definitely showed promise, as you can see here.
Then, one morning
I looked out horrified. My once bountiful, leafy, fruit laden tomato plants had been defoliated! The
scientific name for this particular hornworm is Manduca sexta. Manduca comes
from the Latin word for glutton, a very apt description for this voracious
eater! There, at the base of the plants
were the telltale pellets. Hornworms
are notoriously hard to see because
they are masters of disguise and manage to blend right in with the leaves and
stalks of the tomato plant, but there they were- chomping away. They have, over the last few years, become the
bane of my tomato-growing existence. I pick them off and dispatch them- I’ll spare you the gory
details, but I don’t want to come back as a hornworm for I have done some
despicable things to hornworms, maybe even worse than the crimes I have
committed against ants. Here are some pics of the nasty little green
devils at work.
The damage was
almost complete by early August. We
managed to harvest a few tomatoes, but not many. Defeated once more, I left the
plants there on the deck for the
remaining hornworms to finish off. And
finish them off they have- as evidenced by the
last remaining tomato in the last frame, and the fact that the pellets are much larger than they were earlier in the summer. But I cannot find the
hornworms this time. I have a feeling that they may be in the soil pupating. That process is magical, and a year or so ago we were able to witness the
metamorphosis of a hornworm into a sphinx moth when I inadvertently dug up a
pupa while replanting the Earthboxes. Here are some pics of what happened.The first pic is a close-up of the hornworm in the larval stage. See the horn on its tail end?
This is the pupa I dug up. I put it in a shallow dish of soil to finish the metamorphosis and hoped that it wouldn't dry out and die before making the transition.
Finally, we saw that the pupa case was beginning to split
Finally a moth struggled out, shook off its wings and flew away to lay eggs and begin the cycle all over again.
The hornworms that ate this year's tomato crop are probably the great grandchildren of this one. And so it goes. . .
If you'd like to see some much better pics and learn more about hornworms, here's a really nice and informative site from the University of Florida: Hornworms
2 comments:
I hate those things...I always fed them to my chickens!
Our chickens got them as a special treat, too. I don't like them because of the damage they cause to my tomatoes, but they do turn into useful moths for pollinating plants,and the sphinx moth does pollinate our night blooming cereus, so I let some survive every year. It's hard to find a balance with nature sometimes.
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