Anobinae

The Anobinae are a subfamily of moths in the family Erebidae described by Jeremy Daniel Holloway in 2005.[1][2] Common morphological characteristics of Anobine moths include a dark head and prothoracic collar, lighter color on the thorax, and either bipectinate antennae or antennae with flagellomeral setae in males.[3]

Anobinae
Anobinae
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Superfamily: Noctuoidea
Family: Erebidae
Subfamily: Anobinae
Holloway, 2005

Genera

gollark: (in any case, it's probably less than the resource waste from Electron etc. by rather a lot)
gollark: I do vaguely feel this way about encryption and whatever - if people were trustworthy and nice™, we could save some amount of system resources and key distribution hassle and whatever. As it turns out, though, they aren't, so it isn't very relevant, and even if everyone suddenly did stop being antagonistic, this is a ridiculously unstable state.
gollark: What of the GTech™ contrasocietous chambers™?
gollark: You don't get secure systems by saying "let's just trust Jeff here".
gollark: Well, the energy thing is separate, but this is good security design, yes.

References

  1. Lafontaine, Donald; Schmidt, Christian (19 March 2010). "Annotated check list of the Noctuoidea (Insecta, Lepidoptera) of North America north of Mexico". ZooKeys. 40: 26. doi:10.3897/zookeys.40.414.
  2. Zahiri, Reza; et al. (2011). "Molecular phylogenetics of Erebidae (Lepidoptera, Noctuoidea)". Systematic Entomology. 37: 102–124. doi:10.1111/j.1365-3113.2011.00607.x.
  3. Lafontaine, J. Donald; Walsh, J. Bruce (18 March 2010). "A review of the subfamily Anobinae with the description of a new species of Baniana Walker from North and Central America (Lepidoptera, Erebidae, Anobinae)". ZooKeys. 39: 3–11. doi:10.3897/zookeys.39.428.


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