I think you may be right--that species is here in NC. Merrill On Tue, Feb 22, 2011 at 11:03 AM, kjchilds <kjchilds@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > It looks similar to something I recently had identified as Pseudexentera > spoliana. It may not appear to be an exact match but I'd look at it and > other species of Pseudexentera. The patterns on the front legs look to be a > close match. > > Ken Childs > Henderson, TN > Chester County > > http://www.finishflagfarms.com > > > ------------------------------ > *From:* Harry Wilson <harrywilson@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> > *To:* NC Moths <ncsc-moths@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> > *Sent:* Tue, February 22, 2011 8:46:46 AM > *Subject:* [ncsc-moths] Unidentified Tortricid Moth > > I believe the moth in my photos from last night is probably a Eucosmini, > but I have not been able to find it through MPG or BG. I believe the last > image, 7720 (taken Sat. night) is probably the same species. Any ideas, > anyone? I also had a very striking Roadside Sallow, quite a few Green > Cloverworm Moths, an Alternate Woodling, and my dear friend, R. frustrana. > Also on Saturday I had a Reddish Speckled Dart. > > Harry Wilson > Zebulon, NC > > -- J. Merrill Lynch Echo Valley Farm Watauga County, NC Elevation: 3,400 feet