Lepyrus

Lepyrus is a genus of true weevils in the beetle family Curculionidae. There are more than 70 described species in Lepyrus.[1][2][3]

Lepyrus
Lepyrus palustris
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Coleoptera
Family: Curculionidae
Subfamily: Molytinae
Genus: Lepyrus
Germar, 1817

Species

These 71 species belong to the genus Lepyrus:

  • Lepyrus alternans Casey, 1895
  • Lepyrus arctoalpinus Korotyaev, 1998
  • Lepyrus armatus Weise, 1893
  • Lepyrus asperatus Schaufuss, 1882
  • Lepyrus bermani Korotyaev, 2008
  • Lepyrus bimaculatus Dejean, 1821
  • Lepyrus binotatus Schoenherr, 1834
  • Lepyrus bituberculatus Cristofori & Jan, 1832
  • Lepyrus brevis Schneider, 1900
  • Lepyrus caesius Csiki, 1934
  • Lepyrus canadensis Casey, 1895
  • Lepyrus canus Gyllenhal, 1834
  • Lepyrus capucinus (Schaller, 1783)
  • Lepyrus caucasicus Korotyaev, 1995
  • Lepyrus chinganensis Zumpt, 1936
  • Lepyrus christophi Faust, 1882
  • Lepyrus christophori Kleine, 1918
  • Lepyrus cinereus Weise, 1893
  • Lepyrus colon Germar, 1817
  • Lepyrus costulatus Faust, 1882
  • Lepyrus dahlii Cristofori & Jan, 1832
  • Lepyrus dorsalis Reitter, 1890
  • Lepyrus elongatus Zumpt, 1936
  • Lepyrus errans Casey, 1895
  • Lepyrus evictus Scudder
  • Lepyrus flavidulus Reitter, 1908
  • Lepyrus frigidus Lomnicki, 1894
  • Lepyrus gamma Megerle
  • Lepyrus ganglbaueri Faust, 1888
  • Lepyrus gemellus Kirby, 1837
  • Lepyrus geminatus Say, 1831
  • Lepyrus germinatus Say, 1831
  • Lepyrus gibber Faust, 1882
  • Lepyrus griseus Melichar, 1912
  • Lepyrus herbichi Reitter, 1896
  • Lepyrus impudicus Cristofori & Jan, 1832
  • Lepyrus japonicus Roelofs, 1873
  • Lepyrus kabaki Korotyaev, 1995
  • Lepyrus konoi Zumpt, 1936
  • Lepyrus kozlovi Korotyaev, 1995
  • Lepyrus labradorensis Blair, 1933
  • Lepyrus merkli Korotyaev, 1995
  • Lepyrus motschulskyi Faust, 1882
  • Lepyrus nebulosus Motschulsky, 1860
  • Lepyrus nordenskioeldi Faust, 1885
  • Lepyrus nordenskioldi Faust, 1885
  • Lepyrus notabilis Faust, 1882
  • Lepyrus oregonus Casey, 1895
  • Lepyrus palustris (Scopoli, 1763)
  • Lepyrus perforatus Casey, 1895
  • Lepyrus pinguis Casey, 1895
  • Lepyrus quadriguttatus Sturm, 1826
  • Lepyrus quadrinotatus Boheman, 1842
  • Lepyrus quadrituberculatus Cristofori & Jan, 1832
  • Lepyrus rufoclavatus Sturm, 1826
  • Lepyrus rugicollis Desbrochers, 1895
  • Lepyrus semicolon Billberg, 1820
  • Lepyrus sibiricus Zumpt, 1938
  • Lepyrus signatipennis Roelofs & W., 1873
  • Lepyrus sokolovi Korotyaev, 1998
  • Lepyrus staudingeri Zumpt, 1936
  • Lepyrus stefanssoni (Leng, 1919)
  • Lepyrus terrestris Motschulsky, 1860
  • Lepyrus tesselatus Van Dyke, 1928
  • Lepyrus tessellatus Van Dyke, 1928
  • Lepyrus triguttatus Germar, 1817
  • Lepyrus tsherenkovi Korotyaev, 1995
  • Lepyrus variegatus Schmidt, 1856
  • Lepyrus ventricosus Faust, 1882
  • Lepyrus v-griseum Megerle,
  • Lepyrus volgensis Faust, 1882
gollark: Even with computers they still managed to mess the phone network up so horribly.- calls appear to use an awful voice codec- multimedia messages are overcharged massively for- caller ID spoofing is a very common thing- mobile phones have stupidly complex modem chips with excessive access to the rest of their phone, closed source firmware and probably security bugs- SIM cards are self contained devices with lots of software in *Java*?! In a sane system they would need to store something like four values.- "eSIM" things are just reprogrammable soldered SIM cards because apparently nobody thought of doing it in software?!- phone towers are routinely spoofed by law enforcement for no good reason and apparently nobody is stopping this- phone calls/texts are not end to end encrypted, which is practical *now* if not when much of the development of mobile phones and whatever was happening- there are apparently a bunch of exploits in the protocols linking phone networks, like SS7
gollark: I think if a tick takes a few seconds or something.
gollark: <@221827050892296192> If TPS drops really really low it will stop.
gollark: I actually found this page on it. https://wiki.vg/Server_List_PingAmazing how much of Minecraft's been reverse engineered.
gollark: The widget thing sounds cool. I think you could actually do it as an external webserver thing instead of a plugin, since IIRC Minecraft servers have some sort of external reporting protocol.

References

  1. "Lepyrus Report". Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved 2019-09-23.
  2. "Lepyrus". GBIF. Retrieved 2019-09-23.

Further reading

  • Media related to Lepyrus at Wikimedia Commons


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