Embarrassment of Riches
Moss Colony in Full Spore
Flying Shrimp on Wild Bergamot
Emerging Doe
Eastern Bumblebee on Milkweed Flowers
Black Iris in Late Afternoon Light
Hipsters with Canines
New Leaves in Flight (color)
New Leaves in Flight
Backlash
Dignity in the Freezing Rain
Hipsters with Canines (color)
The Digital Age
Out of the Black and Into the Blue
Moveable Feast II
Proof of Love II
Greener Times
"Trumpets Voluntary"
The Heart is a Lonely Hunter III
Oh Canada!! III
Anatomy of an Infestation
Earth, Sea and Sky (sepia)
Diagonal
Free Will and Predisposition
Darrel, Watching the Crusie Ships Depart
Idyll
The Final Hours
The Looking Glass Self
Winged and Caped Beauty - Male (Frontal)
June Feast Days
Winged and Caped Beauty - Male
Ordered Chaos
Hesitation - Doe and Faun
Fed and Safe
Tropical Glories
Order
Rolling Stones - Detroit
New Sumac
"The Color Purple"
Lazy Sunday
Prima Vera
Considering the Source
Spring Iris in Rain
A Feast of Feathers, Color, Light and Shadow
Moment of Silence
See also...
See more...Port in a Storm


After a flash thunderstorm, this skittish fellow who normally refuses to pose for pictures, clings to the grasses in the wind to dry its wings. Nature preserve, June, 2015
Please view in LightBox or larger sizes for best effect.)
Cisseps fulvicollis is a day-flying narrow-winged tiger moth. It is small to medium size (FW length 15 - 21 mm) with a relative large body for the size of its elongate wings. The head and collar are light orange. The thorax is brown gray and the abdomen is slightly metallic blue-black. The forewings are warm brownish gray and the hindwings are black peripherally and translucent pale gray-white with black veins centrally. The black antennae are bipectinate, slightly wider in males than in females.
This moth resembles moths of the day-flying genus Ctenucha. It can be told from both of the species of this genus found in North America by the combination of orange collar, black tegulae, and pale central hindwings.
Please view in LightBox or larger sizes for best effect.)
Cisseps fulvicollis is a day-flying narrow-winged tiger moth. It is small to medium size (FW length 15 - 21 mm) with a relative large body for the size of its elongate wings. The head and collar are light orange. The thorax is brown gray and the abdomen is slightly metallic blue-black. The forewings are warm brownish gray and the hindwings are black peripherally and translucent pale gray-white with black veins centrally. The black antennae are bipectinate, slightly wider in males than in females.
This moth resembles moths of the day-flying genus Ctenucha. It can be told from both of the species of this genus found in North America by the combination of orange collar, black tegulae, and pale central hindwings.
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