Echinopyrrhosia

Echinopyrrhosia is a genus of parasitic flies in the family Tachinidae. There are about nine described species in Echinopyrrhosia.[1][2]

Echinopyrrhosia
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Diptera
Family: Tachinidae
Genus: Echinopyrrhosia
Townsend, 1914

Species

These nine species belong to the genus Echinopyrrhosia:

  • Echinopyrrhosia alpina Townsend, 1914
  • Echinopyrrhosia arrogans Reinhard, 1975
  • Echinopyrrhosia atypica Townsend, 1914
  • Echinopyrrhosia browni Curran, 1941
  • Echinopyrrhosia melanica Townsend, 1914
  • Echinopyrrhosia pellacis Reinhard, 1975
  • Echinopyrrhosia pictipennis Curran, 1941
  • Echinopyrrhosia trophocyon Aldrich, 1928
  • Echinopyrrhosia varia (Walker, 1853)
gollark: XTMF was not really designed for this use case, so it'll be quite hacky. What you can do is leave a space at the start of the tape of a fixed size, and stick the metadata at the start of that fixed-size region; the main problem is that start/end locations are relative to the end of the metadata, not the start of the tape, so you'll have to recalculate the offsets each time the metadata changes size. Unfortunately, I just realized now that the size of the metadata can be affected by what the offset is.
gollark: The advantage of XTMF is that your tapes would be playable by any compliant program for playback, and your thing would be able to read tapes from another program.
gollark: Tape Shuffler would be okay with it, Tape Jockey doesn't have the same old-format parsing fallbacks and its JSON handling likely won't like trailing nuls, no idea what tako's program thinks.
gollark: Although I think some parsers might *technically* be okay with you reserving 8190 bytes for metadata but then ending it with a null byte early, and handle the offsets accordingly, I would not rely on it.
gollark: Probably. The main issue I can see is that you would have to rewrite the entire metadata block on changes, because start/end in XTMF are offsets from the metadata region's end.

References

  1. "Echinopyrrhosia". GBIF. Retrieved 2020-01-25.
  2. O'Hara, James E. "Taxonomic and host catalogue of the Tachinidae of America North of Mexico". Retrieved 2019-07-02.

Further reading


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