Confused cloudwing butterfly
![confused cloudwing butterfly confused cloudwing butterfly](https://bugguide.net/images/cache/GQA/0PQ/GQA0PQ10VQPK4KUK0KPKLK9KZKWKRKPKGQB05QY0XK2KQK9KHKV0KK6K7KRSGK30MK1KGKLSWQBKBQZS4KJ0XKRSVQ.jpg)
![confused cloudwing butterfly confused cloudwing butterfly](http://www.carolinanature.com/butterflies/ccloudywing8769.jpg)
This species, like the Northern Cloudywing, is not usually found in large numbers, and one is more likely to see single individuals. Pretty afternoon in the North Georgia Mountains. Identification: Upperside is dark brown forewing spots are transparent and elongated.
![confused cloudwing butterfly confused cloudwing butterfly](https://www.butterfliesandmoths.org/sites/default/files/styles/bamona_scale_and_crop_480x480/public/bamona_images/dsc02821.jpg)
In the south, where it has two broods per year, two seasonal forms occur. Butterfly sightings from across the United States and Canada, from the North American Butterfly Association. carpel bar the spot is displaced outward and is not aligned with the others above it in Confused but is larger and aligned with the others in Southern. Confused Cloudywing Thorybes confusis Bell, 1922. The photograph may be purchased as wall art, home decor, apparel, phone cases, greeting cards, and more. The Northern Cloudywing is similar, but has nonaligned subapical spots, all spots are smaller in size than the Southern Cloudywing, its antenna are not light-colored at the bend, and its face is dark. Thorybes bathyllus, the southern cloudywing (sometimes spelled southern cloudy wing), is a North American butterfly in the family Hesperiidae.Southern cloudywings can be difficult to identify because of individual variation and confusing seasonal forms. Southern Cloudywing is a photograph by Kim Pate which was uploaded on August 10th, 2013. The antenna has white at the bend, and the face is white or a light gray. To see where this butterfly has been reported, visit: The Ontario Butterfly Atlas Online. Generally, the Northern Cloudwing is far more common in Ontario. A brownish skipper with white, aligned subapical spots and large spots arranged transversely through the middle of the forewing, the second and third of which are joined in an hourglass-shaped spot. The range of this close relative of the Northern Cloudywing does not extend beyond Southwestern Ontario.