Contents:
Blinded Sphinx Moth. Bold Medicine Moth. Bold-feathered Grass Moth. Boxwood Leaftier Moth. Brown Panopoda Moth. Buck Moth. Cabbage White Butterfly. Canadian Owlet Moth. Canadian Sphinx. Catalpa Sphinx. Cattail Caterpillar Moth. Cecropia Silk Moth. Changeable Grass-Veneer. Checkered White. Chickweed Geometer. Chosen Sallow Moth.
Close-banded Yellowhorn Moth. Clouded Sulphur. Cloudless Sulphur Butterfly.
Clover Hayworm Moth. Clover Looper Moth. Clymene Haploa Moth. Colorful Zale. Columbine Duskywing. Common Angle Moth. Common Buckeye Butterfly. Common Gray Moth.
Caterpillars typically molt five times during the larva stage—their skin does not grow with their body and they must shed their skin and grow a new layer as they eat and expand. Eastern Tiger Swallowtails produce two separate broods, or generations, throughout the summer. Tobacco Budworm Moth. Share This Story! Snowberry Clearwing Moth. Clover Looper Moth.
Common Looper. Common Oak Moth. Common Wood-Nymph. Confused Eusarca.
Confused Woodgrain. Copper Underwing Moth. Corn Earworm Moth. Crambid Snout Moth. Cross-striped Cabbageworm Moth. Curve-toothed Geometer Moth. Dark-banded Geometer.
Deep Yellow Euchlaena. Delicate Cycnia. Dimorphic Tosale Moth. Dingy Cutworm Moth. Distinct Quaker Moth. Dotted Grey. Double-lined Porminent. Double-toothed Prominent. Dreamy Duskywing. Eastern Comma. Eastern Tiger Swallowtail.
Eastern-tailed Blue Butterfly. Eight-spotted Forester Moth. Elm Sphinx. Evergreen Bagworm Moth. Eyed Baileya.
Faint-spotted Angle Moth. Fall Webworm. False Underwing Moth. Fervid Plagodis. Fiery Skipper. Fir Tussock Moth. Five-spotted Hawk Moth. Forage Looper Moth. Forest Tent Caterpillar Moth. Friendly Probole Moth. Galium Sphinx Moth. George's Midget. Giant Leopard Moth. Giant Swallowtail Butterfly. Goldenrod Stowaway.
Grape Leaffolder. Grapevine Epimenis Moth. Gray Hairstreak Butterfly. Gray Spring Moth. Great Oak Dagger. Great Spangled Fritillary. Green Cloverworm Moth. Green Leuconycta. Gypsy Moth. Hackberry Emperor. Hag Moth. Hagen's Sphinx Moth. Hahncappsia Moth. Harnessed Tiger Moth.