Loudoun Wildlife Conservancy
People and Wildlife Living in Harmony

Luna Moth

Vol. 12 Issue 2, Summer 2007
By Ginger Walker

 
Home
About LWC
Programs and Field Trips
Citizen Science Environmental Monitoring
Habitat Restoration
Issues and Actions Alerts
Educational Resources
Habitat Herald Archives
LWC Store
Join
Volunteer
Contact Us
LWC Community
Local Links
Site Map and Search

“In June as many as a dozen species may burst their buds on a single day. No man can heed all these anniversaries; no man can ignore all of them.”

- Aldo Leopold

 

Download Article



 

Many people say that they will never forget their first sight of a Luna Moth, and that has certainly been my experience. 

When my family moved from Alaska to Virginia when I was ten years old, many elements of the southeast’s ecology startled me. 

One summer morning, my mother found an extraordinary green moth on our front porch. 

Luna Moth
Under-side view of a Luna Moth

Assuming it was dead, she placed it in a jar on her bedroom dresser.  A thunderstorm roared through our neighborhood that night, and in a flash of lightning the moth came alive in the jar and fluttered around so violently that it woke my mother up.

Luna Moths were once common in our area, but now it is a rare treat to see these lovely creatures in most parts of Loudoun County.  Luna Moths are members of the silkworm family, which includes other giant local moths such as the Polyphemous Moth.  Luna Moths are easy to identify by their pale green color and long “tail streamers.” 

The caterpillars are the archetypical cartoon caterpillar with soft, squishy green bodies. They are able to eat a variety of tree leaves, including walnut leaves which are poisonous to many other species of caterpillar.  Luna Moth cocoons look like dead, dry leaves.  After the moth emerges from the cocoon, it will live for just one week.  Luna Moths have no mouths, so they do not eat in this stage.  Their only goal is mating and egg-laying, and the moths can mate for hours at a time. 

The Luna Moth only flies at night, which is how it earned its name, meaning “moon.”  If you find one during the day, it will probably be “frozen,” just like the moth my mother found.  If you discover one of these beautiful silkworm moths, leave it undisturbed.  When night falls, the moth will fly again!

More articles pertaining to Loudoun wildlife and our environment as well as activities to explore nature can be found in the Habitat Herald Archives.