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From: "Jerzy" <0...@m...pl>
Newsgroups: pl.rec.ogrody
Subject: Re: yucca
Date: Wed, 17 Jul 2002 17:13:51 +0200
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Ukryj nagłówki
> > > > jak te owoce wyglądają?
> > > http://helios.bto.ed.ac.uk/bto/desertecology/yuccas.
htm
> > E, prawie jak u ostróżki. A jak się wykłada 'Yucca moth' po polsku?
> No, może nie po polsku - Tegeticula maculata
>
> > Nie ma jakichś podobnych ciem u nas?
[...]
Many Lepidoptera occur in isolated colonies as relict (remnant)
populations, cut off from relatives elsewhere by geologic or climatic
changes. Australia and New Zealand have unusually diverse relict
populations of the primitive Micropterigidae and Hepialidae. In North
America, Europe, and Asia many relict species have survived since the
Pleistocene glaciations on isolated southern mountaintops. They include
members of such genera as Oeneis and Erebia (Satyridae), Boloria
(Argynnidae), Parnassius (Papilionidae), Anarta (Noctuidae), and Pediasia
(Pyralidae).
http://members.tripod.com/entlep/Lepidoptera.htm
> http://www.biology.vanderbilt.edu/BIO/ToLProdox/tege
ticula.html
A to:
Parategeticula pollenifera
http://www.biology.vanderbilt.edu/BIO/ToLProdox/para
tegeticula_pollenifera
.html
http://www.biology.vanderbilt.edu/BIO/ToLProdox/prod
oxidae.html
--
Pozdr. Jerzy Nowak
"Learn the rules. Than break some."
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