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Welt : English : Science : Biology : Flora and Fauna : Animalia : Arthropoda : Insecta : Lepidoptera : Heterocera : Sphingidae
- Ceratomia catalpae: Catalpa Caterpillar - Exercise from Invertebrate Anatomy OnLine covering the systematics, natural history, external and internal anatomy of this larva.
- Ceratomia catalpae: Catalpa Sphinx - Distribution and description of this moth, and photographs and information on its development from egg to adult.
- Death's-head Hawkmoth - Information from Wikipedia on these moths of the genus Acherontia, characterized by a skull-shaped pattern on the thorax, their development and the folklore that surrounds them.
- John's Sphingidae Collection - Photographs of a personal collection from the Netherlands.
- Macroglossum stellatarum - Information from Wikipedia on the humming bird hawk moth, its distribution, life cycle and host plants, with a gallery of photographs.
- Manduca quinquemaculata and Manduca sexta - Photographs of the tomato and tobacco hornworms and their larvae, with information on their hosts, symptoms, life cycle and description.
- Manduca quinquemaculata and Manduca sexta - Provides photographs of different life stages of the tobacco and tomato hornworms, their distribution, description, life cycle, host plants, damage caused and management.
- Pseudosphinx tetrio: Tetrio Sphinx - Photographs of this moth and its caterpillar, with information on its distribution, description, life cycle, biology, host plants, damage caused and management.
- Snowberry Clearwing: Hemaris diffinis - Photographs and information on the natural history of this moth.
- Sphingidae - Information from Wikipedia on this family of moths commonly known as hawk moths, sphinx moths or hornworms, their life cycle and host plants, with a gallery of photographs.
- Sphingidae of China - Annotated checklist of the hawkmoths (Lepidoptera: Sphingidae) of China, Mongolia, and the Korean Peninsula.
- Sphingidae of the Western Palaearctic - Illustrated and annotated checklist of the hawkmoths of Europe, North Africa, the Middle East, and Central Asia by A.R. Pittaway.
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