Ithomia amarilla

Ithomia amarilla is an ithomiine butterfly from the subfamily Danainae, described by Richard Haensch in 1903.[1] It is found in Ecuador.

Ithomia amarilla
Scientific classification
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I. amarilla
Binomial name
Ithomia amarilla
Haensch, 1903
gollark: If you are converting the cellulosey bits you could just get rid of the lignin *or* take out the cellulose.
gollark: ?news
gollark: Consequentialist-ly speaking (yes, I am aware you don't subscribe to this) a technological development could be "bad", if the majority of the possible uses for it are negative, or it's most likely to be used for negative things. To what extent any technology actually falls into that is a separate issue though.
gollark: You can show that 2 + 2 = 4 follows from axioms, and that the system allows you to define useful mathematical tools to model reality.
gollark: If you're going to say something along the lines of "see how it deals with [SCENARIO] and rate that by [OTHER STANDARD]", this doesn't work because it sneaks in [OTHER STANDARD] as a more fundamental underlying ethical system.

References

  1. LepIndex: The Global Lepidoptera Names Index. Beccaloni G.W., Scoble M.J., Robinson G.S. & Pitkin B., 2005-06-15


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