Prototheora biserrata

Prototheora biserrata is a species of moth of the family Prototheoridae. It is found in South Africa, where it known from only one and possibly two localities in the southern Cape Province. The holotype was collected in the wet, temperate Groenkop forest near George. A second specimen, possibly the female of the same species, was found at Camps Bay, a coastal fynbos habitat immediately south of Cape Town.

Prototheora biserrata
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Prototheoridae
Genus: Prototheora
Species:
P. biserrata
Binomial name
Prototheora biserrata
Davis, 1996[1]

The wingspan is about 18 mm. Adults have been recorded in early March.

Etymology

The specific epithet is derived from the Latin bi (meaning two, double) and serratus (meaning toothed like a saw, serrate) and refers to the doubly serrated upper and lower margins of the pseudoteguminal arms in the male genitalia.

gollark: You have to implement pathfinding and stuff on top of that.
gollark: GPS just gives you location.
gollark: `sleep` and whatnot yield, so that should work.
gollark: Parallel is good if you have two things *which yield* and want to run them simultaneously.
gollark: `parallel` can do that quite simply.

References

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