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Photo#1157336
Anicla - Anicla espoetia

Anicla - Anicla espoetia
Beard tract, Balcones Canyonlands NWR, Burnet County, Texas, USA
October 1, 2010
This was the only non-infecta individual of this genus I've photographed at that location. The best match I can make is forbesi with the dark collar and details of the FW dark speckling and blotches.

Moved
Moved from Anicla. A careful read of Lafontaine's MONA fascicle (MONA 27.1, p. 58, pl. B, fig. 33; 2004) indicates that this matches the Edwards Plateau population of this species.

Moved
Moved from Forbes's Dart. Based on the discussion below, this may match a BOLD example of Anicla espoetia but it doesn't match the MPG images of that species.

Looks like...
It's a duplicate image, but the other shot is currently sitting at the genus level.
I'm not sure which one you want to remove. I'm adding a few Anicla espoetia today, FYI. (from Texas)

 
Deleted the duplicate observation
Thanks for letting me know. Apparently your thumbnail image link to that one just goes away.

.
Chuck, I am interested to see this placement. I have photographed a number of these with the same "check-mark" reniform spot, however none of mine have the distinct PM markings of yours. Some were dark like yours but a number were light. I am sending one to BOLD to see what answer I get.

 
Keep us posted
...on the barcoding. I'm not terribly confident in my ID but it's definitely not infecta. I just haven't found enough descriptive info to help tease the others apart.

 
.
Still nothing from BOLD but I thought you might like to take a look at Hodges #10910.1. I went to the BOLD images and the reniform spot has the same shape as this one. The only place I have seen it. Found it going through all of the cutworm spreads for someone else! Have never even done that for my self!

 
Anicla espoetia
Interesting possibility. I agree that this moth looks quite similar to the one BOLD specimen, but differs in some details from the MPG images.

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