Malacorhinus
Malacorhinus is a genus of skeletonizing leaf beetles in the family Chrysomelidae. There are about 11 described species in Malacorhinus. They are found in North America and the Neotropics.[1][2][3]
Malacorhinus | |
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Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Class: | Insecta |
Order: | Coleoptera |
Family: | Chrysomelidae |
Tribe: | Metacyclini |
Genus: | Malacorhinus Jacoby, 1887 |
Species
These 11 species belong to the genus Malacorhinus:
- Malacorhinus acaciae (Schaeffer, 1906)
- Malacorhinus apicalis Jacoby, 1887
- Malacorhinus biplagiatus Jacoby, 1887
- Malacorhinus decempunctatus Jacoby, 1887
- Malacorhinus dilaticornis Jacoby, 1887
- Malacorhinus exclamationis Jacoby, 1892
- Malacorhinus foveipennis (Jacoby, 1879)
- Malacorhinus irregularis (Jacoby, 1887)
- Malacorhinus knullorum Wilcox, 1951
- Malacorhinus tilghmani Mignot, 1970
- Malacorhinus tripunctatus (Jacoby, 1879)
gollark: I can't point to a particular build/project tooling system which *utterly* doesn't fail for me. makefiles fail unfathomably sometimes, cmake fails unfathomably lots of the time, cargo sometimes runs into bizarre dependency errors, nimble works fine actually but I don't ever install stuff from it, luarocks is no, python has an awful mess, etc.
gollark: > In a typical build system, the dependency arrows go down. Although this is the way they would naturally go due to gravity, it is unfortunately also where the enemy's gate is. This makes it very inefficient and unfriendly. In tup, the arrows go up. This is obviously true because it rhymes. See how the dependencies differ in make and tup:Wow, this sounds like a great build system.
gollark: It's a rough measure of project size/complexity.
gollark: Possibly a ten-thousandth.
gollark: Meanwhile, build.py is probably below a thousandth of the size of GCC → use.
References
- "Malacorhinus Report". Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved 2019-09-25.
- "Malacorhinus". GBIF. Retrieved 2019-09-25.
- "Malacorhinus genus Information". BugGuide.net. Retrieved 2019-09-25.
Further reading
- Nie, R-E; Bezděk, J.; Yang, X-K (2017). "How many genera and species of Galerucinae s. str. do we know? Updated statistics (Coleoptera, Chrysomelidae). In: Chaboo CS, Schmitt M (Eds) Research on Chrysomelidae". ZooKeys (720): 91–102. doi:10.3897/zookeys.720.13517. PMC 5740445. PMID 29290727.
- Wilcox, John A. (1965). A Synopsis of the North American Galerucinae (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae). New York State Museum and Science Service.
- Riley, Edward G.; Clark, Shawn M.; Seeno, Terry N. (2003). Catalog of the leaf beetles of America north of Mexico (Coleoptera: Megalopodidae, Orsodacnidae and Chrysomelidae, excluding Bruchinae). Special Publication No. 1. The Coleopterists' Society. ISBN 978-0-9726087-1-8.
- Lobl, I.; Smetana, A., eds. (2013). Catalogue of Palaearctic Coleoptera, Volume 6: Chrysomeloidea. Apollo Books. ISBN 978-90-04-26091-7.
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