Ah! You're right! This one had lost the tip of it's tail horn somehow, but the diagonal lines vs. V's on the side are definite ID characteristics. I just assumed without verifying, since it's on the tomato plant and I'm not growing any Nicotiana this year, that it was a
tomato hornworm.
Thanks for the links. I also found this one that shows and compares the two:
https://www.coopext.colostate.edu/4dmg/Pests/tomato.htm
It's hard to say what exactly in my garden is the primary attractant for the beneficials. I let most weeds grow to flower, then dead head or dig them up for the "drowned weed bucket." I have portions of lawn that are intentionally being replaced by white clover in the sunny areas and ground ivy in the shady areas. I let sections of grass flower -- TREMENDOUS beneficial attractant. I have a lot of flowering shrubs and plants to attract butterflies and hummingbirds, that also attracts a lot of other insects. I have a lot of fragrant flowers. There are ALWAYS some flowers in bloom throughout the season. In fact, I think in terms of "Hmm, I need more flowers that bloom this time of year." or "Gotta fill that gap between Irises and Liatris.... " I've even gone so far as to say "Oh these yellow mustard weed flowers are setting off the blue Amsonia flowers very nicely, so I can't cut them."
Right now, the spearmint patch is absolutely swarming with all kinds of bees and wasps, as are peppermint, cornmint, spotted mint, and lemon balm... and bees that come out of Rose of Sharons are completely dusted in pollen, Jewel Weed/Touch-Me-Not are constantly in motion without any breeze because all the flowers are being visited, Crimson Clover, White Clover, Plantain, and other "weeds", Butterfly Weed, Butterfly Bush, Button Bush, Summersweet, Red Cardinal Flower, Purple Lobelia, Salvia, Echinacea, Primrose, Aster, Calendula, Marigold, Bee Balm, Black-eyed Susan, Morning Glory, many grass species including my rice, and of course all the other vegetables... to name a few.
