Pseudoganisa currani

Pseudoganisa currani is a moth in the family Eupterotidae. It was described by Schultze in 1910.[1] It is found on Mindanao in the Philippines.[2]

Pseudoganisa currani
Scientific classification
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P. currani
Binomial name
Pseudoganisa currani
Schultze, 1910

The length of the forewings is 28 mm. The wings are tawny, the forewings with a dark brown spot at the end of the cell and a straight oblique postmedial line and two brownish submarginal patches veins two and four. The basal half of the hindwings is hairy, with the postmedial line slightly curved outward.

Etymology

The species is named for Mr. H. M. Curran.[3]

gollark: Anyway, we hit *those* limits ages ago, so we achieve our high clocks by extending the processors out into arbitrarily many orthogonal dimensions, ignoring the "speed of light", and patterning the logic gates directly onto underlying physical laws.
gollark: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rapid_single_flux_quantum
gollark: Clock speeds are constrained mostly by CMOS processes as far as I know, lightspeed issues are secondary.
gollark: What? Superconducting logic circuits can easily hit tens of GHz.
gollark: Well, it or the newer models.

References

  1. Beccaloni, G.; Scoble, M.; Kitching, I.; Simonsen, T.; Robinson, G.; Pitkin, B.; Hine, A.; Lyal, C., eds. (2003). "Pseudoganisa currani". The Global Lepidoptera Names Index. Natural History Museum. Retrieved May 27, 2018.
  2. Savela, Markku. "Pseudoganisa currani Schultze, 1910". Lepidoptera and Some Other Life Forms. Retrieved October 18, 2018.
  3. Philippine Journal of Science (D) 5: 162


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