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Yes, I saw one in Minnesota.
I have an example: humming hawkmoth drinking from a dianthus
The tomato [Solanum lycopersicum] is the favorite garden plant of the hawkmoth [Sphingidae family]. The hawkmoth has a long tube called a proboscis, to suck nectar from flowers. But it also likes to insert the tube into tomatoes, for their delicious juices. Little black spots on a tomato's surface may represent the former feeding locations of hawkmoths.
The elephant hawkmoth caterpillar disguise its self as a snake. It does this by withdrawing its trunk-like nose, making its face look like that of a snake.
The Silence of the Lambs
Hoverfly Hawkmoth Scorpion Mosquito Silkworm
It is believed to turn into a White Lined Sphinx Moth, another name for it is a Hawkmoth.
Not a Hawkmoth, this is a swallowtail butterfly caterpillar.
The UK's fastest flying insect is the male Hawkmoth, specifically the Hummingbird Hawkmoth (Macroglossum stellatarum). It can reach speeds of up to 30 miles per hour (48 kilometers per hour) during its rapid, hovering flight as it feeds on nectar from flowers. Its agility and speed make it a remarkable pollinator in the UK’s ecosystems.
The elephant hawkmoth likes to feed on fuchsia bushes. In addition, they like to feed on other plants such as rose bushes.
It squirts its sperm all over it's enemies, and its highly corrosive, but then there penis or vagina is destroyed, and they cannot mate.
The Gardenia Bee Hawkmoth caterpillar eats gardenia leaves. The webworm caterpillar also feeds on the leaves on a gardenia plant.