If you have any questions please contact our Support Team. There is now a field guide to moths that is truly excellent. That 1983 list (actually compiled thru 1978) is outdated, but those numbers have long been used (and continue to be in the MONA listing). The technical team consisted of Marc Seriff, Tom Ralston, Ray Heinrich, Steve Trus, Ken Huntsman, Janet Hunter, Dave Brown, Craig Dykstra, Doug Coward, and Mike Ficco. In 1987, Case was promoted again to executive vice-president. It is the "Peterson Field Guide to Moths of Northeastern North America", by David Beadle & Seabrooke Leckie, published in 2012. refer to pages with photographs in "Moths & Caterpillars of the North Woods" by Jim Sogaard, 2009, (the North Woods series relates to wildlife in northern Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota in the US & Ontario in Canada) Numbers noted as We begin this long 2-part of moths with those in the families SPHINGIDAE and SATURNIIDAE as they are the most striking and spectacular in appearance and thus those that are most apt to catch the attention of people who may become interested in moths. It is 1 of 7 North American families in the superfamily NOCTUOIDEA that includes 12 former noctuid subfamilies: including CALPINAE, CATOCALINAE, EUTELILINAE, HERMINIINAE, HYPENINAE, BOLETOBLINAE, DIPHTHERINAE, EREBINAE, and others.
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