Anthidium atripes
Anthidium atripes is a species of bee in the family Megachilidae, the leaf-cutter, carder, or mason bees.[1][2]
Anthidium atripes | |
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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
- Griswold, T., and J. S. Ascher., 2005, Checklist of Apoidea of North America (including Central America and the Caribbean)
- Catalogue of Life : 2009 Annual Checklist : Literature references
- Anthidium atripes - - Discover Life
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