During this century the southwestern corn borer, Diairaea grandiosella (Lepidoptera: Pyralidae), has extended its range from subtropical Mexico into the United States, below 38-degrees-N latitude. This maize-feeding insect is now found from Arizona east to Alabama and north to Kansas, Missouri, and Tennessee. The species has adapted to the shorter growing seasons, longer summer daylengths, and lower winter temperatures present in the southern US than are present in Mexico. Life history, morphological, and behavioral traits were compared for populations of D. grandiosella from southeastern Missouri and southcentral Mexico and revealed differentiation in a suite of characters, some of which show clear adaptation to a northern climate while others are obviously less adaptive. An electrophoretic comparison of enzymes from D. grandiosella from the central portion of its range in the US and from a population from southcentral Mexico indicated that considerable genetic differentiation has occurred. Quantitative genetic studies should be undertaken on the original and dispersed populations to differentiate between those characters that have been directly responsible for the adaptation of this insect to northern maize-growing regions and those that have changed merely due to genetic correlations with characters undergoing selection. Data from such studies, together with available information about the dispersal of this insect, should provide insight into factors regulating the movement of tropical insects into temperate regions.