Rhynchophorini

The tribe Rhynchophorini is the largest member of the true weevil subfamily Dryophthorinae. Alonso-Zarazaga and Lyal (1999) treated it as a distinct subfamily, Rhynchophorinae (in the family Dryophthoridae).[1] Weevils of this tribe have the pygidium (VII abdominal tergite) not covered by the elytra.

Rhynchophorini
Male (left) and female specimens of Cyrtotrachelus dux
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Coleoptera
Family: Curculionidae
Subfamily: Dryophthorinae
Tribe: Rhynchophorini
Schönherr, 1838
Sphenophorus cicatristriatus, Rocky Mountain Billbug
Cactophagus spinolae, Cactus weevil from Teotihuacan

This tribe includes the largest weevils of the subfamily, such as palm weevils.

Genera and selected species

gollark: The second one is less controversially "yours" than the first.
gollark: Those are different things, though. A face recognition model is going to be trained on a lot of people's faces, and can then generically match faces together. You can then use that to encode someone's face into an embedding vector you can use for matching.
gollark: I had assumed this stuff was now ML-based and so you would just compare embedding vectors or something.
gollark: What are they eigenvectors *of*, exactly?
gollark: eigen is "own" or something, and apparently people prefer that over "characteristic vector/value".

References

    • Alonso-Zarazaga, M. A. & Lyal, C.H.C. 1999. A world catalogue of families and genera of Curculionoidea (Insecta: Coleoptera, excepting Scolytidae and Platypodidae). Entomopraxis, SCP Edition, Barcelona
  1. "ITIS, Integrated Taxonomic Information System". Retrieved 2018-05-04.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.