Aglia

Aglia is a genus of moths in the family Saturniidae first described by Ochsenheimer in 1810. It is the only genus in the subfamily Agliinae.[1][2]

Aglia
Aglia tau
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Superfamily:
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Subfamily:
Agliinae
Genus:
Aglia

Ochsenheimer, 1810

Species

  • Aglia tau (Linnaeus, 1758)
  • Aglia ingens Naumann, 2003
  • Aglia japonica Leech, 1889
  • Aglia homora Jordan (in Seitz), 1911
  • Aglia sinjaevi Brechlin, 2015[3]
  • Aglia vanschaycki Brechlin, 2015[3]
gollark: Just enumerate all possible strings in order, silly.
gollark: Or "possibly TC but you can't know unless you throw ridiculously insane amounts of computing power at it".
gollark: Hmm, perhaps if you make it use the most recent likely-true-but-hard-to-prove maths problem somehow...
gollark: The twin prime conjecture, say?
gollark: For "probably TC but very hard to prove", maybe tie it to unsolved maths problems?

References

  1. Rougerie, R. & Collective of iBOL Saturniidae expert taxonomists (2009). "Online list of valid and available names of the Saturniidae of the World". Lepidoptera Barcode of Life. Retrieved January 12, 2017.
  2. Savela, Markku. "Aglia Ochsenheimer, 1810". Lepidoptera and Some Other Life Forms. Retrieved November 13, 2018.
  3. Brechlin R. (2015). "Two new species in the genus Aglia Ochsenheimer, 1810 (Lepidoptera: Saturniidae; Agliinae)". Entomo-Satsphingia. 8(1): 20-25.


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