To install click the Add extension button. That's it.

The source code for the WIKI 2 extension is being checked by specialists of the Mozilla Foundation, Google, and Apple. You could also do it yourself at any point in time.

4,5
Kelly Slayton
Congratulations on this excellent venture… what a great idea!
Alexander Grigorievskiy
I use WIKI 2 every day and almost forgot how the original Wikipedia looks like.
Live Statistics
English Articles
Improved in 24 Hours
Added in 24 Hours
What we do. Every page goes through several hundred of perfecting techniques; in live mode. Quite the same Wikipedia. Just better.
.
Leo
Newton
Brights
Milds

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Holotrichia
Holotrichia species (possibly H. reynaudi)
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Coleoptera
Family: Scarabaeidae
Subfamily: Melolonthinae
Tribe: Melolonthini
Genus: Holotrichia
Hope, 1837[1]
Species

Many species

Holotrichia is a genus of beetle in the family Scarabaeidae, which are well known as "chafer beetles" or "white-grubs" for their white larvae that are found under the soil where they feed on the roots of plants.

Particularly well known species include Holotrichia serrata which is a serious problem in sugarcane cultivation and Holotrichia consanguinea which is a problem in groundnut cultivation.[2] Holotrichia parallela is known as the "dark/large black chafer" or "Asian cockchafer" and is a serious agricultural pest of sweet potato, peanut and soybean crops in China.[3]

YouTube Encyclopedic

  • 1/1
    Views:
    10 575
  • Paramecium: Ciliados de agua dulce

Transcription

List of species

  • H. acuticollis
  • H. akolana
  • H. amamiana
  • H. andamana
  • H. andrewesi
  • H. anthracina
  • H. aritai
  • H. atkinsoni
  • H. barbata
  • H. behrensi
  • H. bengalensis
  • H. bhutanensis
  • H. bicolorata
  • H. brenskeiana
  • H. brunneipennis
  • H. burmanica
  • H. calliglypta
  • H. canlaonensis
  • H. carinata
  • H. carmelita
  • H. ceylonensis
  • H. cochinchina
  • H. consanguinea
  • H. convexifrons
  • H. convexopyga
  • H. costulata
  • H. dalatensis
  • H. danielssoni
  • H. danjoensis
  • H. dannymohagani
  • H. deliana
  • H. deplanata
  • H. desiderata
  • H. diomphalia
  • H. disparilis
  • H. dohrni
  • H. dolini
  • H. dorsalis
  • H. dubiosa
  • H. ebentera
  • H. egregia
  • H. ernesti
  • H. farinosa
  • H. fissa
  • H. freyi
  • H. furcifer
  • H. gaoligongshanica
  • H. gebleri
  • H. geilenkeuseri
  • H. glabriclypeata
  • H. glabrifrons
  • H. gressitti
  • H. guandaoshana
  • H. hankowiensis
  • H. helleri
  • H. herwangshana
  • H. heterodactyla
  • H. heterotincta
  • H. hirsuta
  • H. holovestita
  • H. horishana
  • H. inducta
  • H. insecata
  • H. intermedia
  • H. intersa
  • H. iridescens
  • H. iridipennis
  • H. kanarana
  • H. kandulawai
  • H. karschi
  • H. kaszabi
  • H. kiotonensis
  • H. koraiensis
  • H. kulzeri
  • H. kunmina
  • H. kwatungensis
  • H. laevigata
  • H. langeri
  • H. lata
  • H. laticeps
  • H. liukueinsis
  • H. longicarinata
  • H. longilamellata
  • H. longiuscula
  • H. loochooana
  • H. luangia
  • H. madurensis
  • H. magna
  • H. marginicollis
  • H. mausonia
  • H. mizusawai
  • H. montana
  • H. montivaga
  • H. mucida
  • H. murzini
  • H. nagpurensis
  • H. nathani
  • H. nicobarica
  • H. nigrescens
  • H. nigricollis
  • H. nigrofusca
  • H. nilgiria
  • H. nilgirina
  • H. notaticollis
  • H. nubiliventris
  • H. oblita
  • H. obscura
  • H. occipitalis
  • H. ochrogaster
  • H. omeia
  • H. opacipennis
  • H. opuana
  • H. ovata
  • H. pagana
  • H. parallela
  • H. parva
  • H. parvioculata
  • H. perotteti
  • H. picea
  • H. pilifrons
  • H. pilipyga
  • H. pinguis
  • H. plagiata
  • H. planipennis
  • H. plumbea
  • H. problematica
  • H. pruinosella
  • H. pruinosipennis
  • H. pubifemorata
  • H. pulvinosa
  • H. pygidialis
  • H. quinquefoliata
  • H. remorata
  • H. repetita
  • H. reynaudi
  • H. richteri
  • H. rosettae
  • H. rotundiceps
  • H. rubida
  • H. rufescens
  • H. rufina
  • H. rufodorsalis
  • H. rufoflava
  • H. rufofulva
  • H. rufula
  • H. rufus
  • H. rugans
  • H. rugaticollis
  • H. rugatifrons
  • H. rugifrons
  • H. rustica
  • H. sakuraii
  • H. sauteri
  • H. schereri
  • H. schmitzi
  • H. sculpticollis
  • H. sculptifrons
  • H. scutata
  • H. scutulata
  • H. semihirta
  • H. semiserrata
  • H. semitomentosa
  • H. senegalensis
  • H. serrata
  • H. serraticollis
  • H. seticollis
  • H. setiventris
  • H. setosa
  • H. severini
  • H. sharpi
  • H. shibatai
  • H. shishona
  • H. siamensis
  • H. sichotana
  • H. signatifrons
  • H. sikkimana
  • H. similis
  • H. simillima
  • H. sjoestedti
  • H. sororia
  • H. subrugipennis
  • H. sumatrana
  • H. szechuanensis
  • H. teinzoana
  • H. tenasserima
  • H. tetarana
  • H. tjibodasia
  • H. tokara
  • H. truncata
  • H. tuberculata
  • H. umbrata
  • H. undulata
  • H. ungulata
  • H. vernicata
  • H. vethi
  • H. vietnamensis
  • H. wangerbaoensis
  • H. weyersi
  • H. wiebesi
  • H. yamayai
  • H. yui
  • H. yunnana

References

  1. ^ Hope, FW (1837). The Coleopterist's Manual, containing the lamellicorn insects of Linneus and Fabricius. London, UK: Bohn. p. 99. Retrieved 10 June 2020.
  2. ^ Ananthakrishnan TN (2004) General and applied entomology. Tata McGraw-Hill ISBN 0-07-043435-2 pages 481-482
  3. ^ Yu, Hong; Zhang, Jie; Huang, Dafang; Gao, JiGuo; Song, Fuping (July 2006). "Characterization of Bacillus thuringiensis Strain Bt185 Toxic to the Asian Cockchafer: Holotrichia parallela". Current Microbiology. 53 (1): 13–17. doi:10.1007/s00284-005-0097-8. ISSN 0343-8651. PMID 16775781. S2CID 20588251.
This page was last edited on 14 February 2024, at 17:04
Basis of this page is in Wikipedia. Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 Unported License. Non-text media are available under their specified licenses. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. WIKI 2 is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wikimedia Foundation.