Myrmecia dichospila
Myrmecia dichospila is an Australian ant which belongs to the genus Myrmecia. This species is native to Australia and is heavily distributed in South Australia and have some presence in other several states.[1]
Myrmecia dichospila | |
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Species: | M. dichospila |
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Myrmecia dichospila Clark, 1938 | |
Description
Myrmecia dichospila is a small bull ant species. The average length is only 7-9 millimetres, but males are somewhat bigger at 11 millimetres. Mandibles are yellow, and most of the body is completely black. It has similarities to the M. pilosula.[2][3]
gollark: Increasing the key sizes a lot isn't very helpful if it doesn't increase the difficulty of breaking it by a similarly large factor.
gollark: I'm not sure what P = NP would mean for that. Apparently doing that is non-polynomial time, and a constructive P = NP proof would presumably let you construct a polynomial-time algorithm.
gollark: Asymmetric cryptography stuff relies on it being impractically hard to do some things, such as factor large semiprime numbers.
gollark: Symmetric encryption is safe still, I think. And polynomial-time doesn't mean you can't have ridiculously gigantic (fixed) exponents or constant factors.
gollark: Hmm. I see.
References
- "Myrmecia dichospila Clark, 1938". Atlas of Living Australia. Govt of Australia. Retrieved 12 March 2014.
- Clark, John (1951). The Formicidae of Australia (Volume 1) (PDF). Melbourne: Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, Australia. pp. 198–200.
- Clark, John (1943). A revision of the genus Promyrmecia Emery (Formicidae) (PDF). Victoria. p. 108. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-03-08.
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