Results/Conclusions Habitat heterogeneity at WGR supports a diverse assemblage of common and rare Lepidoptera. Dry-grassland habitat in open disturbed fields within the target zone had the highest SER (0.15/min), followed by naturally disturbed pitch pine-lowland habitat (0.13/min) last burned in 2004, Atlantic-white cedar bog (SER = 0.11/min), and recently restored pitch pine habitat (SER = 0.06/min). Dry-grassland habitat (n=25) and pitch-pine lowland habitat (n=23) supported the greatest species richness. Atlantic-white cedar bog had the greatest IER (2.25/min), followed by dry-grassland habitat (1.07/min), disturbed pitch pine-lowland habitat (0.46/min), and restored pitch pine forest (0.14/min). Only two species occurred among the four habitat types. Atlantic-white cedar bog (n=9) supported the greatest number of unique species, followed by dry grassland (n=8), restored pitch pine forest (n=7), and pitch pine-lowland (n=1) habitats. These data suggest that disturbed habitats with early-successional host plants support a wide suite of species. In contrast, the least disturbed habitat (i.e., Atlantic-white cedar bog) supported the greatest number of unique species. The observed species composition and habitat occurrence at WGR was facilitated by a patchwork of large tracts of relatively undisturbed habitat interspersed with small pockets of disturbed habitat where the disturbance regime has maintained ideal conditions for disturbance-dependent species.