TENT CATERPILLAR MOTHS & AMERICAN LAPPET

Forest Tent Caterpillar moth. This species is similar to its cousin above, but Forest Tent Caterpillar moths have dark lines against a lighter-colored background. (Eastern Tent Caterpillars are the reverse.) Forest Tent Caterpillars are the less common of the two species in our area. I have found a few individuals in June and early July. 

American Lappet on a stick: photographed April 2016 in the Hocking Hills area (eastern Ohio).

Eastern Tent Caterpillar moth. The larvae of this species live in communal webs. The adult moths usually fly in June. In some years, they can be quite abundant, but in other years they are nearly absent. 

American Lappet moth crawling on a leaf. (This is not its normal resting pose; these moths usually rest with their wings folded as in the photo above.)

American Lappet moth, resting on my fingertip. These are neat-looking moths, closely related to the tent caterpillars (above). 

Another Forest Tent Caterpillar moth, with a different pattern. Sometimes the entire middle band is dark. 

I have found a couple of American Lappets at my home moth lights in April and early May, and also at Hocking Hills.