Encyclopedia > Lepidoptera

  Article Content

Lepidoptera

Lepidoptera
Scientific classification
Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Arthropoda
Class:Insecta
Order:Lepidoptera
Families
Acanthopteroctetidae[?]
Acrolophidae[?]
Adelidae[?]
Agonoxenidae[?]
Agaristidae[?]
Alucitidae[?]
Apatelodidae[?]
Arctiidae[?]
Bedelliidae[?]
Blastobasidae[?]
Bombycidae[?]
Bucculatrigidae[?]
Carposinidae[?]
Choreutidae[?]
Coleophoridae[?]
Copromorphidae[?]
Cosmopterigidae[?]
Cossidae[?]
Ctenuchidae[?]
Cycnodiidae[?]
Dalceridae[?]
Danaidae
Dioptidae[?]
Doidae[?]
Douglasiidae[?]
Drepanidae[?]
Elachistidae[?]
Epermeniidae[?]
Epiplemidae[?]
Epipyropidae[?]
Eriocraniidae[?]
Ethmiidae[?]
Galacticidae[?]
Gelechiidae[?]
Geometridae[?]
Glyphipterigidae[?]
Gracillariidae[?]
Heliconiidae[?]
Heliodinidae[?]
Heliozelidae[?]
Hepialidae[?]
Hesperiidae[?]
Hyblaeidae[?]
Incurvariidae[?]
Lacturidae[?]
Lasiocampidae[?]
Lecithoceridae[?]
Libytheidae[?]
Limacodidae[?]
Liparidae[?]
Lycaenidae[?]
Lymantriidae[?]
Lyonetiidae[?]
Manidiidae[?]
Megalopygidae[?]
Megathymidae[?]
Micropterigidae[?]
Mimallonidae[?]
Momphidae[?]
Nepticulidae[?]
Noctuidae[?]
Nolidae[?]
Notodontidae[?]
Nymphalidae[?]
Oecophoridae[?]
Oinophilidae[?]
Olethreutidae[?]
Opostegidae[?]
Papilionidae[?]
Parnassiidae[?]
Pericopidae[?]
Phaloniidae[?]
Pieridae[?]
Plutellidae[?]
Prodoxidae[?]
Psychidae
Pterophoridae[?]
Pyralidae[?]
Pyromorphidae[?]
Riodinidae[?]
Saturniidae[?]
Satyridae[?]
Schreckensteiniidae[?]
Scythrididae[?]
Sematuridae[?]
Sesiidae[?]
Sphingidae[?]
Stenomidae[?]
Symmocidae[?]
Thyatiridae[?]
Thyrididae[?]
Tineidae[?]
Tischeriidae[?]
Tortricidae[?]
Uraniidae[?]
Urodidae[?]
Walshiidae[?]
Yponomeutidae[?]
Ypsolophidae[?]
Zygaenidae[?]
Ref: Nearctica (http://www.nearctica.com/nomina/lepid/leps.htm)
as of 2002-06-26
ITIS 117232 (http://www.itis.usda.gov/servlet/SingleRpt/SingleRpt?search_topic=TSN&search_value=117232)
as of 2002-08-12
Lepidoptera: Order of insects that includes the butterfly and the moth. Lepidoptera have two pairs of membranous wings joined to each other and covered with scales, and mouth parts adapted for sucking. The order comprises more than 160,000 species.

Please see also the difference between a butterfly and a moth.



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
Digital Rights Management

... Web site for information and pointers. An early example of a DRM system is the Content Scrambling System (CSS) employed by the DVD Consortium[?] on movie DVD disks. The ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 39.8 ms