Eucoryphus

Eucoryphus is a genus of flies in the family Dolichopodidae.[2][3][1] It is found in the Alps and the mountains of southern Corsica.[4]

Eucoryphus
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Diptera
Family: Dolichopodidae
Subfamily: Hydrophorinae
Genus: Eucoryphus
Mik, 1869[1]
Type species
Eucoryphus brunneri
Mik, 1869[1]

Species

  • Eucoryphus brunneri Mik, 1869[1]
  • Eucoryphus coeruleus Becker, 1889[5]
  • Eucoryphus piscariviverus Pusch, Stark & Pollet, 2020[4]
gollark: Oh, and possible new transport thing for the ultrarich: suborbital rocket to a different continent.
gollark: That sounds very cool if quite possibly impractical.
gollark: There aren't that many alternatives.
gollark: Personally, my suggested climate-change-handling policies:- massively scale up nuclear fission power, it's just great in most ways- invest in better rail infrastructure - maglevs are extremely cool™ and fast™ and could maybe partly replace planes?- electric cars could be rented from a local "pool" for intra-city transport, which would save a lot of cost on batteries- increase grid interconnectivity so renewables might be less spotty- impose taxes on particularly badly polluting things- do research into geoengineering things which can keep the temperature from going up as much- increase standards for reparability; we lose so many resources to randomly throwing stuff away because they're designed with planned obsolecence- a very specific thing related to that bit above there - PoE/other low-voltage power grids in homes, since centralizing all the AC→DC conversion circuitry could improve efficiency, lower costs of end-user devices, and make LED lightbulbs less likely to fail (currently some of them include dirt-cheap PSUs which have all *kinds* of problems)
gollark: You can get AR-ish things which just display notifications or something.

References

  1. Mik, Josef (1869). "Beitrage zur Dipteren-Fauna Oesterreichs". Verhandlungen der Zoologisch-Botanischen Gesellschaft in Wien. 19: 19–36.
  2. Capinera, John L. (2008-09-17). Encyclopedia of Entomology. Springer. pp. 2238–. ISBN 9781402062421. Retrieved 20 December 2012.
  3. Yang, D.; Zhu, Y.; Wang, M.; Zhang, L. (2006). World Catalog of Dolichopodidae (Insecta: Diptera). Beijing: China Agricultural University Press. pp. 1–704. ISBN 9787811171020.
  4. Pusch, Martina H.E.; Stark, Andreas; Pollet, Marc (2020). "Description of a new Eucoryphus species from the island of Corsica, France (Diptera: Dolichopodidae, Hydrophorinae)". Zootaxa. 4816 (4): 527–540. doi:10.11646/zootaxa.4816.4.5.
  5. Becker, Theodor (1889). "Altes und Neues aus der Schweiz. Ein dipterologischer Beitrag". Wiener Entomologische Zeitung. 8: 73–84, 1 pl. doi:10.5962/bhl.part.20028. Retrieved 26 May 2016.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.