Its a Bee Hawk Moth (Cephonodes hylas) . This is a green individual , An Orange individual also found in Yeeor - Thane . Its food plant is gardenia. Common Name : Hummingbird hawk moth , is also used for same individual.
--- On Mon, 8/16/10, Ashwin Baindur <[email protected]> wrote: From: Ashwin Baindur <[email protected]> Subject: [ButterflyIndia] Lepidopteran extravaganza on Din ka raja To: [email protected], "Indianmoths" <[email protected]> Date: Monday, August 16, 2010, 2:24 PM Two years ago, when we came to the Bungalow No 180 in CME, we had planted Din ka raja in our garden. Over time the plants have grown more than twelve feet high and as of now have thousands of flowers. The garden has a nice gentle fragrance throughout the day and the two bushes have many visitors by day and dusk. Of course, there were hoverflies, bees, tiny flies and so on. I strongly recommend you to plant Din ka raja (Cestrum diurnum), (yes even though it is exotic), it is a fabulous nectar resource for Lepidoptera. The most interesting of the visitors is the Common Jay which is found in CME but rarely in other parts of Pune. In the dusk today I dscovered two interesting species - many Common Banded Awls and three to four hawk moths which appear to be bee-hawk or hummingbird hawk moths of some kind. The hawk moths were very swift, flew high and darted rapidly - very difficult for me to film. However, a chancy swipe with my butterfly net allowed me to trap a moth - I could only take images of the front and rear for fear of hurting the insect. Fortunately,, I was able to do so without harming it and it sped off at light speed into the dusky sky. While sipping, they were so absorbed that I could bring the handle of the butterfly net within a few inches. Pushing the flower branch didn't pset them, they moved with the flowers, When I caught one speciemens, the others resumed feeding almost immediately. It was as ifthey were starving and suddenly found lots of nectar and wanted to drink it all before sme one else got there. Can anyone id the moth? -- Enjoy

