Hummingbird hawk-moth: The bird-like insect with a giant sucking mouthpart

Name: Hummingbird hawk-moth (Macroglossum stellatarum) Where it lives: Europe and North Africa, migrating north in summer and south in winter  What it eats: Nectar  

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What's cool: A bird! This is a hummingbird hawk-moth! Not a hummingbird, this amazing species is a moth. Hummingbird-like, its wings flap so quickly they make an audible buzz, demonstrating convergent evolution.  

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The hummingbird hawk-moth is partial to flowers with tube-shaped petals and uses its long, curled proboscis — an elongated sucking mouthpart — to extract nectar from the flower's center. 

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One of the most remarkable aspects of the hummingbird hawk-moth is its vision. Unlike most insects, this moth depends on its eyes to precisely position its giant proboscis in the center of the flowers.  

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In a study published Jan. 29 in the journal PNAS, Stöckl and her colleagues used high-speed cameras to film hawk-moths as they hovered next to artificial flowers with different patterns on them. 

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They realized that the hawk-moths were using continuous visual feedback to fine-tune their movements along the patterns and make sure that the proboscis reached the center of the pattern, where the nectar should be. 

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Visually directed reaching is more common in mammals since it needs a complex brain circuit. Despite their smaller neural systems, hummingbird hawk-moths can conduct this complex activity.  

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We seldom see insects using eyesight to guide appendages. "Having a potential insect that guides an unusual appendage with vision was exciting," Stöckl added.  

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