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At porchlight in open juniper-oak woodlands. This is apparently a Texas endemic: http://mothphotographersgroup.msstate.edu/species.php?hodges=8484
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This was my first photographic documentation of the species at the Refuge HQ. MPG page: http://mothphotographersgroup.msstate.edu/species.php?hodges=8484
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Here's a June flight record for this species at the Beard tract of Balcones Canyonlands NWR.
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This seems to be a moth I have not had here before.
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This seems to be a moth I have not had here before.
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This seems to be a moth I have not had here before.
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Same individual as Greg's: http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/3254265 Just one individual at the sheet. FW 10mm.
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very worn and missing many scales, but it reminded me of a very faded Phytometra orgiae.
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very worn and missing many scales, but it reminded me of a very faded Phytometra orgiae.
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very worn and missing many scales, but it reminded me of a very faded Phytometra orgiae.
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a worn and faded individual
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a worn and faded individual
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Seasonally fairly common. Not often photographed with its wings spread a little.
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Phytometra orgiae Family Erebidae Dripping Springs, Hays Co., Texas 19 September 2016