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Similar to E. subgracilis but with head larger and somewhat more smoothly rounded, with ground coloring paler (often slightly yellowish in life), and usually with two distinct pale stripes at sides of top of pronotum. In most regions E. subgracilis is a late season species, but in Sonoran and Colorado Desert regions, adults are often found in spring as well, and some may be found year-round. Generally E. subgracilis is more southern and eastern in distribution, but the two species may meet near the Colorado River in southern Arizona and California.
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