PEST PROFILES: MOTH AND BUTTERFLY CATERPILLARS
Picture of Tomato Hornworm
Tomato Hornworm

Picture of Tobacco Hornworm
Tobacco Hornworm

Picture of a Tomato hornworm with Parsitic Wap Eggs on his back
Tomato Hornworm with Parasitic Wasp Eggs

Picture of adult tobacco hornworm
Tobacco Hornworm (Adult)

Picture of adult Tobacco HOrnworm
Tobacco Hornworm (Adult)

Picture of Tomato Hornworm
Tomato Hornworm (Adult)

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Hornworms

Description:
Tobacco hornworm and tomato hornworm are similar in all stages of development. While both species of caterpillars have a large horn on the posterior end of the body, tobacco hornworm has 7 diagonal stripes on each side of the body; tomato hornworm has 8 chevron-shaped stripes. Adult tobacco hornworms are slate brown compared to the ash-gray color of tomato hornworms.

Damage:
Hornworm larvae feed on blossoms, leaves, and fruit. They can extensively defoliate plants and scar fruit. They are rarely a problem in the warmer interior valleys unless natural enemies are disrupted.

Life cycle:
Hornworms overwinter as pupae in the soil. Moths emerge in early June through August. At night, eggs are deposited on the underside of leaves at 1 to 5 eggs per plant visit (may oviposit up to 2,000 eggs total). Larvae emerge 4 days later and develop in 3 weeks as pupae. Heavy egg deposition is common in August and early September due to a peak in overwintering moth emergence along with that of a second (or possibly third) brood.