Death's-head Hawkmoth Caterpillar.

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Gottshotz

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A very large caterpillar, think of your index finger as a guide, gives rise to an equally large and impressive Hawkmoth, with a skull-like marking on its thorax. The moth can squeak when alarmed and was traditionally seen as an omen of death. The moth was even rumoured to be a tormentor of the notoriously unstable King George lll who was thrown into one of his infamous bouts of "madness" when 2 of these large moths were discovered in his bedroom in his residence in Kew, London in 1801. A migrant visitor to the UK this one was taken in Spain with a D60 and 18-55mm @ 26mm., f7.1 ISO 200, 1/60 Sec., handheld.
 
Brilliant creature! Nice shot.
Thanks Steven , it was certainly a "" whopper" of a caterpillar and stuck out like a sore thumb --- black and yellow in insects usually mean "bad to eat" for birds, so possibly this is why it wasn't picked off by a passing predator.
 
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A very large caterpillar, think of your index finger as a guide, gives rise to an equally large and impressive Hawkmoth, with a skull-like marking on its thorax. The moth can squeak when alarmed and was traditionally seen as an omen of death. The moth was even rumoured to be a tormentor of the notoriously unstable King George lll who was thrown into one of his infamous bouts of "madness" when 2 of these large moths were discovered in his bedroom in his residence in Kew, London in 1801. A migrant visitor to the UK this one was taken in Spain with a D60 and 18-55mm @ 26mm., f7.1 ISO 200, 1/60 Sec., handheld.
Fabulous insect!
 
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