KEWANEE WEATHER

Summertime with cecropias


By Jill Bartelt    July 31, 2024
The strikingly-patterned gray, red, and white wings of a cecropia moth span an impressive 5-6 inches or more. [Photo taken by the author]

I love living in a world of cycles, of seasons, where something can be experienced time and time again throughout the years.

Each summer, one of my most beloved pastimes is raising cecropia moth caterpillars. Adult cecropia moths are both endearing and magnificent, with plush, striped bodies and gray, red, and white wings that can span six inches or more. These largest moths native to North America belong to the giant silk moth family (Saturniidae) along with pale green luna moths, golden-tan polyphemus moths, and others.

Cecropia moths are utterly harmless. The adults have no working mouthparts, which means that they can’t eat. After emerging from their cocoon in late May or June, their sole purpose is to find a mate and produce the next generation. Female moths release airborne chemicals called pheromones, which male moths sense with their lush, feathery antennae.

After mating, the females lay their eggs on an appropriate caterpillar host plant; these include black walnut, silver maple, wild cherry, and many others. The beautiful but ephemeral adult moths live only a week or two.

From the side, the cecropia moth’s plush, striped body and compound eye are visible. This individual is a male, identifiable by the lush, plumy antennae. [Photo taken by the author]

When I was little, on wintertime walks through the woods, my dad would often spot cecropia cocoons. We would bring them home and store them in the garage over the winter (bringing them inside would have disturbed their natural cycle and caused them to hatch too early, before outdoor conditions were right). In early summer, the large, exquisite moths would emerge from their cocoons. If one happened to be a female, we would keep her in a screened box overnight, hoping for her to attract a mate.

She usually did. If I went out to her box right around dawn, I would see several male cecropia moths flapping in the shadows nearby. They emerged from the woods as if by magic. Normally, these moths are shy and mysterious. I seldom see them in the wild, and with good reason: to survive, they must be wary of predators, such as birds. But the female’s irresistible pheromones changed everything, drawing male moths out into the pale morning light. Some may have followed the scent trail for up to a mile.

That evening, my dad would collect a dozen or so eggs before releasing the female moth. Once the eggs hatched (about 10-14 days), we set to work raising the caterpillars. We put them out in net bags on an appropriate tree—usually black walnut, because the caterpillars did so well on it.

My dad cautioned me that whichever food plant the caterpillars started on, they had to stay with it. They could not, for example, switch from black walnut to silver maple.

In the summer of 2019, my dad gave me several cecropia caterpillars from a brood he had been raising. As I was now the proud owner of a tall black walnut tree, I could properly nourish them. I kept the cocoons from those caterpillars over the winter, watched the adult moths emerge the following spring, and raised their caterpillars over the summer. The cycle has continued every year, so that this summer I am raising my sixth generation of caterpillars. This metamorphosis is always new—always familiar—always thrilling to watch.

Above, when cecropia caterpillars first hatch from the egg, they are tiny black threads just a quarter of an inch long. Below, left, a cecropia caterpillar in its second instar (growth stage). Below, right, a cecropia caterpillar in its third instar (growth stage). [Photos by the author]

The caterpillars hatch as tiny black threads, only a quarter of an inch long. Soon, though, they have grown enough to shed their skin and enter their second growth stage, or instar. Now yellow with black polka dots, they have doubled in length. In about a week, the caterpillars once again shed their skin. Third instar caterpillars are over an inch long. They’re yellow-green with black polka dots and multi-colored “horns” along their bodies; these “horns” are harmless to people but may deter a hungry bird.

Soon, the caterpillars undergo two more transformations. In the fourth instar, they’re still green, but more substantial and lacking polka dots. In the fifth and final instar, the “horns” nearest the head have turned from red to orange.

Above, in this photo, a cecropia caterpillar has just shed its skin (attached to the leaf, above the caterpillar). In doing so, it has moved from the third to the fourth instar (growth stage). Below left, a cecropia caterpillar in the fourth instar (growth stage). Below right, a cecropia caterpillar in the fifth and final instar (growth stage). At this stage, cecropia caterpillars are similar in size and color to tomato hornworms, a type of sphinx moth caterpillar, but they are not related and will not harm garden plants. [Photos taken by the author]

With one mission only—to devour a boundless feast of leaves—caterpillars in this final stage soon grow to a hefty four inches long—or more!—and must frequently be moved to new branches. They’re sturdy enough to hold gently during these moves, and their leafy diet gives them a pleasant herbal smell. It’s impossible not to smile with a mammoth cecropia caterpillar marching across your hand!

Above, feisty fifth instar cecropia caterpillars move quickly and are always on the lookout for fresh leaves. Below left, Marc Nelson (the author’s husband) can’t help but smile as a mammoth cecropia caterpillar marches across his hand. Below right, this cecropia caterpillar, just beginning to spin its cocoon, has surrounded itself in a web of silk. When the cocoon is finished, it will harden and turn brown. [Photos taken by the author]

This year, my caterpillars hatched from their eggs on June 20. All are now in their final growth stage, and in just a week or two, they will spin their cocoons. It’s always a bittersweet moment for me, when they take this inevitable next step. I will miss taking care of them, watching them grow.

But as the long days of summer end, I hold onto the most beautiful thing about cycles. Next spring I will meet these cecropias again as they emerge from their cocoons and take flight in their lovely adult forms. Then, the season of caterpillars will begin once more.