- I’m afraid it’s not so shrimple - That forced me to groan. Take your upvote.  
 
- it’s just a hummingbird moth Who’s acting like a bird that thinks it’s a bee - Now the moth defeats the mouse and man, it’s messing with the plan, it can’t be believed. 
 
- Sadly they ravage tomatoes and other nightshade while theyre caterpillars so people often kill them with impugnity. Probably contributes to why theyre not commonly seen. 
 
- They’re terrifying in real life though because they look and sound like GIANT bees. But then when you see them chilling by a flower you realize they’re actually just big ol softies - And the larvae are these giant gross green caterpillars with a horn on their butt. Big squishy things that love tomato plants. - I used to see both all the time on the farm. Both scared the crap out of me when I was small. (Thinking the caterpillar could sting and that the moth was a gigantic bee) 
- I used to think they were a type of bee when I was little. - Same, that’s how I learned about them, my mom had to figure out what they were so I wasn’t afraid to play in the yard! 
 
- I usually do a double take thinking they’re a bumblebee before noticing that they move different when I spot them. 
 
- I would love to see a diagram of how its morphology changed through time and evolution, I bet it’s wild 
- That’s a Pokémon. 
- More cute bugs pls 
- Sometimes a cutie is just a cutie, defying classification - Like those damned jumping spiders. They freak me out, but I can’t deny they’re cute as hell. - When they look at me with those big mirror eyes, I say “just take my house it’s yours now” 
 
 
- First time I saw one of these in my garden I thought I was trippin 
- Fun fact: in the northeast US and eastern Canada, you can support their entire life cycle by planting tomatoes and Monarda spp together! 
- If these are fairies, then are mantis shrimp like some Lovecraftian monstrosity from the arthropod Unseelie Court? 
- Because shrimp is bugs 
- I’m guessing, it’s this species: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hemaris_thysbe - (Apparently, this species is also referred to as “hummingbird moth”: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hummingbird_hawk-moth ) 
- this is the kind of thing i want to see in fantasy/scifi media, everything looks broadly the same until you get closer and realize all the trees are actually heavily derived insects. 










