Anthonomus tenebrosus was created in 1843.
The scientific or taxonomic name would be Dicamptodon tenebrosus.
The scientific or taxonomic name would be Anthonomus musculus.
The scientific name of the Blueberry Blossom Weevil is Anthonomus rubi. It belongs to the family Curculionidae, which is a group of beetles commonly known as weevils.
The scientific or taxonomic name would be Anthonomus signatus.
The boll weevil (Anthonomus grandis) attacks cotton crops. It lays its eggs inside cotton bolls, and the young weevils eat their way out.
TThe boll weevil (Anthonomus grandis) is a beetle measuring an average length of six millimetres. It looks similar to the stinkbug however it is smaller in size.
A boll weevil is a plump brown or black beetle with a long tube like snout and 6 spiny legs. The scientific name for the beetle is Anthonomus grandis.
The adjective "dark" in Latin is obscurus (-a, -um) or tenebrosus (-a, -um). "Dark-colored" is ater (-tra, -trum)."The dark" (i.e., darkness) is tenebrae (-arum, f.).
David Gerard Riley has written: 'Refined sampling methodology and action thresholds for the pepper weevil, Anthonomus eugenii cano (Coleoptera: curculionidae)' -- subject(s): Accessible book
A small, grayish, long-snouted beetle (Anthonomus grandis) of Mexico and the southern United States, having adults that puncture cotton buds and larvae that hatch in and damage cotton bolls.Source: http://www.answers.com/boll+weevil?gwp=11&ver=2.3.0.609&method=3
Tenebrae, -arum is the Latin word for "darkness" or "the dark". It appears only in the plural. The adjective "dark" is tenebrosus, -a, -um.I will list the Latin words meaning "dark" (as a noun):OpscurumObscurumObscuritOpscuritasWhichever these you choose, they should mean the noun "dark". If you go on Google Translate, there are also adjectives meaning "dark" as well. These are just the noun ones.
Day is dies (genitive diei, accusative diemas in CARPE DIEM or Seize the day). Night on the other hand is nox (genitive noctis).