Anthidium atripes

Anthidium atripes is a species of bee in the family Megachilidae, the leaf-cutter, carder, or mason bees.[1][2]

Anthidium atripes
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Hymenoptera
Family: Megachilidae
Genus: Anthidium
Species:
A. atripes
Binomial name
Anthidium atripes
Cresson, 1879
Synonyms

see text

Synonyms

Synonyms for this species include:[3]

  • Anthidium polingae Schwarz, 1931
gollark: Probably memory bandwidth, since IIRC most things only have something like 32 bytes/second even to cache.
gollark: They have AVX and stuff. Not "muahahaha 32768 bits per clock cycle".
gollark: I wonder why this sort of thing doesn't exist on general purpose CPU architectures. Probably just horrible memory bandwidth requirements/accursedly large register files.
gollark: In terms of total throughput, I mean.
gollark: That is indeed quite crazy. I wonder how it compares to Intel's AMX thing.

References

  1. Griswold, T., and J. S. Ascher., 2005, Checklist of Apoidea of North America (including Central America and the Caribbean)
  2. Catalogue of Life : 2009 Annual Checklist : Literature references
  3. Anthidium atripes - - Discover Life
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