Parirazona caracae

Parirazona caracae is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae. It is found in Minas Gerais, Brazil.

Parirazona caracae
Scientific classification
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P. caracae
Binomial name
Parirazona caracae
Razowski & Becker, 2007[1]

The wingspan is about 15 mm (0.6 in). The dorsal half of the wings (from the base to the tornus) and costal half of the wings are whitish brown, strigulated (finely streaked) and suffused with brown. The wings are brown in the middle and at the costa terminally. The colour is paler and more white postbasally. The posterior portion of the wings is white with greyish strigulae. The hindwings are whitish, slightly tinged with brownish and strigulated with pale brown.

Etymology

The species name refers to the type locality, Caraca.[2]

gollark: It isn't a very good case.
gollark: They had designed ARM CPUs for ages for their phones. Recently they got good enough and/or Intel annoyed them enough that they switched over.
gollark: ARM is an instruction set. "Traditional CPU[s]" use the x86 instruction set. People argue a lot over which design is best but broadly speaking there doesn't seem to be *that* much difference, although x86 has some advantages like I think greater code density and downsides like variable length instructions being annoying to decode.
gollark: That's not a very valid comparison. But Apple's cores are somewhat better than available x86 ones.
gollark: Apparently they did lose most of their CPU design team to some other company recently, so who knows.

References

  1. tortricidae.com
  2. Józef Razowski & Vitor O. Becker, 2007, Acta Zoologica Cracoviensia 50B (2): 91-128


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