X-Nico

unusual facts about suborder



Similar

Anthropoid

Simian, monkeys and apes (anthropoids, or suborder Anthropoidea, in earlier classifications)

Barbary striped grass mouse

The Barbary striped grass mouse (Lemniscomys barbarus) is a small rodent of the suborder Myomorpha.

Ernst Evald Bergroth

He specialised in the craneflies of the family Tipulidae and bugs of the suborder Heteroptera, and published more than 300 papers in his lifetime.

Eype Mouth

Sphaerius acaroides lives in mud and at plant roots at the edge of standing freshwater pools on the site; this species is particularly noteworthy in that it is the only British representative of the suborder Myxophaga.

Macropod

The marsupial suborder Macropodiformes, which includes kangaroos, wallabies and allies, bettongs, potoroos, and rat kangaroos

Megarachne

The scenes were left in, but the giant spider was instead recast as an unspecified species belong to the primitive spider suborder Mesothelae.

Metathorax

In the suborder Apocrita of the Hymenoptera, the first abdominal segment is fused to the metathorax, and is then called the propodeum.

Sclerodermatineae

The suborder is thought to have originated in the late Cretaceous (145–66 Ma) in Asia and North America, and the major genera diversified around the mid Cenozoic (66–0 Ma).


see also