Eremonidiopsis

Eremonidiopsis is a genus of moths of the family Notodontidae. It consists of only one species, Eremonidiopsis aggregata, which is known from the north-eastern Cuban mountain range Nipe–Sagua–Baracoa in Holguín province, Cuba. The habitat consists of lowland rainforests and sclerophyll rainforests.

Lateral view

Eremonidiopsis
Dorsal and ventral view
Scientific classification
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Genus:
Eremonidiopsis

Aguila, 2013
Species:
E. aggregata
Binomial name
Eremonidiopsis aggregata
Aguila, 2013

The length of the forewings is 12–12.7 mm. The forewings are uniformly brown with a glossy dorsal surface. The ventral surface is uniformly brownish grey. The hindwings are uniformly dark brownish grey

Etymology

The generic name is derived from the name of its Hispaniolan relative Eremonidia. The suffix –opsis refers to the resemblance of the Cuban genus to the Hispaniolan one. The species name is derived from Latin gregis (meaning flock or group) and the suffix atus (meaning having the nature of) and refers to the aggregation of individuals observed during both collecting events.[1]

gollark: It's not, because the bots take ages to go anywhere.
gollark: Something like 150k, although only 40k or so were ever active at most.
gollark: Well, there are enough robots that the machines keep fed.
gollark: No trains, no belts, no pipes, *everything* went over robots, with no efficient buffer chests and vast quantities of bots flying everywhere for everything.
gollark: A lot of the power consumption was from HBase™, which was heavpoot's insane thing using *entirely* robots.

References

  1. Aguila, R.N. 2013: Eremonidiopsis aggregata, gen. n., sp. n. from Cuba, the third West Indian Dioptinae (Lepidoptera, Notodontidae). ZooKeys, 333: 77-91. doi: 10.3897/zookeys.333.5483


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