made predictions supporting Darwin's surmise. Darwin was surprised at the defining characteristic of this species: the "astonishing length" of the whip-like green
spur forming the
nectary of each flower, and remarked to
Joseph Hooker "I have just received such a Box full from Mr Bateman with the astounding
Angræcum sesquipedalia with a nectary a foot long—Good Heavens what insect can suck it"[?] The spur of the flower is from its tip to the tip of the flower's lip. The name "sesquipedale" is Latin for "one and a half feet", referring to the spur length. From his observations and experiments with pushing a probe into the spur of the flower, Darwin surmised in his 1862 book
Fertilisation of Orchids that there must be a pollinator moth with a
proboscis long enough to reach the nectar at the end of the spur. In its attempt to get the nectar at the end of the spur the moth would get pollen rubbed off on its head. The next orchid it visited would then be pollinated in the same manner. Subsequently, the sphingid experts
Walter Rothschild and
Karl Jordan received one male and one female specimen of
Xanthopan morganii (commonly called Morgan's sphinx moth) with an especially long proboscis, collected on Madagascar by
Charles Oberthür and
Paul Mabille. Since Wallace predicted that the mystery pollinator would turn out to be a sphinx moth, rather than simply a large moth as Darwin had suggested, the Madagascan form was named subspecies
praedicta by Walter Rothschild and Karl Jordan, in honour of Wallace's (not Darwin's) prediction. Darwin's earlier, but less specific, prediction was not even mentioned by them. == Evolution ==