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 | |
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Aglia tau | |
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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
- 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.
- Savela, Markku. "Aglia Ochsenheimer, 1810". Lepidoptera and Some Other Life Forms. Retrieved November 13, 2018.
- 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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