Convolvulus Hawk-moth vs Mother-of-Pearl Butterfly

Side-by-side species comparison

Attribute Convolvulus Hawk-moth Mother-of-Pearl Butterfly
Scientific Name Agrius convolvuli Protogoniomorpha parhassus
Order Lepidoptera Lepidoptera
Family Sphingidae Nymphalidae
Size 80-120 mm wingspan 70-90 mm wingspan
Habitat Rivers & Streams Forests
Diet Nectar Feeders Fruit Feeders
Regions Europe, Africa, Asia, Australasia Central Africa, East Africa, Southern Africa
Conservation Least Concern Least Concern

Convolvulus Hawk-moth

A powerful migrant hawk-moth with a streamlined grey body and pink-banded abdomen. It possesses an extraordinarily long proboscis for feeding from deep tubular flowers.

💡

Did You Know?

Its proboscis can exceed 10 cm in length, allowing it to reach nectar in the deepest trumpet-shaped flowers.

Mother-of-Pearl Butterfly

A large butterfly with shimmering pearly white wings that reflect iridescent blue and pink. It inhabits deep forest where it glides through shaded clearings.

💡

Did You Know?

The pearlescent sheen on its wings is produced by tiny overlapping scales that act as multilayer reflectors.