From Biology News Net:
Biologists at the University of California, San Diego have discovered that the future of red and yellow varieties of a San Diego wildflower may depend on the fates of two different animals.The Dutch name for a local hawkmoth is kolibrivlinder, ‘hummingbird moth’, because of similarities in flight and nectar eating tongue.They report in the current issue of the Journal of Evolutionary Biology that monkeyflowers have two different animal pollinators.
The red form, common along the coast, is strongly preferred by hummingbirds, while yellow monkeyflowers, found east of I-15, are favored by hawkmoths.
The researchers suspect the recent increase in San Diego’s hummingbird population, fueled by the growth of suburban developments and gardens, will eventually favor the red over the yellow variety.“Hummingbirds are now three times as dense inland as they were on the coast 50 years ago,” said Joshua Kohn, an associate professor of biology at UCSD, who conducted the study with Matthew Streisfeld, now a researcher at Duke University.
“This increase in hummingbirds may be tipping the balance of selection from favoring yellow to favoring red flowers.”“The shift between the red- and yellow-flowered forms can be seen along any road running from the coast inland in San Diego county and is one of the sharpest natural patterns residents can view while driving in the late spring,” he adds.
“We have shown that this shift is very likely due to selection by different types of pollinators.
The abundance of at least one of these pollinators, hummingbirds, has recently increased dramatically and may well favor an eastern expansion of the red-flowered form.”
“The striking geographic pattern of flower color–where we never see a red-flowered plant in the east or a yellow-flowered plant along the coast–speaks wonders of the power of natural selection to maintain these differences,” said Streisfeld.
Source: University of California - San Diego
Birds of the Los Angeles area: here.



Hello I live in Norwich UK and saw a huge Moth behaving like a humming bird around honeysuckle blossom at about 11pm. I presume it was a Hawk Moth if so is it unusual in UK! I have never seen anything like it before? Thanks Mel
Comment by Mel Sutton — July 20, 2008 @ 10:55 am
Hi Mel, thanks for commenting! From your description, I do think you saw a hawkmoth. See photos here. More information is here.
Comment by Administrator — July 20, 2008 @ 11:04 am