Phalacra vidhisara

Phalacra vidhisara is a moth in the family Drepanidae. It was described by Francis Walker in 1860.[1] It is found in Sri Lanka and India.[2]

Phalacra vidhisara
Scientific classification
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P. vidhisara
Binomial name
Phalacra vidhisara
(Walker, 1860)
Synonyms
  • Hemerophila vidhisara Walker, 1860
  • Phalacra metagonaria Walker, 1866

Description

The wings with the outer margins not excised below the apices. Body pale reddish brown, sparsely irrorated with black scales. Forewings with traces of an antemedial waved black line. Postmedial and submarginal series of black specks. Hindwing with an indistinct sub-basal line. A double medial line and post-medial and sub-marginal series of black specks. Cilia of both wings traversed by a black line. Larva fusiform, where the head is broad. Lateral and dorsal setae and prolonged anal setaceous spines. Body greenish with a dorsal pink band laterally bordered by yellow and two red lines. Pupa purplish brown. Pupa covered with white bloom.[3]

gollark: > The "Write Pattern" command is new for DDR5; this is identical to a write command, but no data is transmitted. Instead, the range is filled with copies of a 1-byte mode register (which defaults to all-zero). Although this takes the same amount of time as a normal write, not driving the data lines saves energy. Also, writes to multiple banks may be interleaved more closely.
gollark: I think DRAM actually has a command for zeroing regions nowadays.
gollark: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3654905/faster-way-to-zero-memory-than-with-memset#3655024
gollark: I would be surprised if CPUs lacked dedicated zeroing capabilities, actually.
gollark: You can do something something SIMD to zero large regions at once.

References

  1. "Phalacra vidhisara Walker 1960" at Insecta.pro
  2. Savela, Markku. "Phalacra Walker, 1866". Lepidoptera and Some Other Life Forms. Retrieved November 19, 2018.
  3. Hampson, G. F. (1892). The Fauna of British India, Including Ceylon and Burma: Moths Volume I. Taylor and Francis. p. 345 via Biodiversity Heritage Library.


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