Utetheisa disrupta

Utetheisa disrupta is a moth in the family Erebidae. It was described by Arthur Gardiner Butler in 1887.[1] It is found in the Philippines (Negros), on the Caroline Islands, Sumatra, the Natuna Islands, Sulawesi, the Moluccas, Irian Jaya, New Guinea, the Solomon Islands and in Micronesia (Angal).[2]

Utetheisa disrupta
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Superfamily: Noctuoidea
Family: Erebidae
Subfamily: Arctiinae
Genus: Utetheisa
Species:
U. disrupta
Binomial name
Utetheisa disrupta
(Butler, 1887)
Synonyms
  • Pitasila disrupta Butler, 1887
  • Nyctemera burica Holland, 1900
  • Deilemera similis Swinhoe, 1917
  • Nyctemera angalensis Matsumura, 1930

Subspecies

  • Utetheisa disrupta disrupta
  • Utetheisa disrupta burica (Holland, 1900)
gollark: What I can easily do is construct a backdoor which nobody else can use, but I don't think that qualifies.
gollark: And practical hidden flaws are more like "if you encrypt 2^16 bytes with the same key it is possible to determine some of the plaintext with slightly higher probability" or known plaintext attacks and such, rather than "hahaha any message whatsoever can be decrypted".
gollark: I have some rough ideas but they'd probably be obvious to anyone competent.
gollark: I would, but I would have to actually know cryptography, which is nontrivial.
gollark: ddg! Dual_EC_DRBG

References

  1. Savela, Markku. "Utetheisa disrupta (Butler, 1887)". Lepidoptera and Some Other Life Forms. Retrieved October 10, 2017.
  2. Dubatolov, V.V. (November 1, 2012). "Tiger Moths (Lepidoptera, Arctiidae) of the Oriental Region, Australia and Oceania". Siberian Zoological Museum. Institute of Animal Systematics and Ecology.


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