Anthropoides
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Anthropoides
Summary
Anthropoides is a taxon[1]. Anthropoides ranks in the top 0.83% of taxon entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1 views/month, #1,630 of 195,241).[2]
Key Facts
- Anthropoides's image is recorded as Blue Crane.jpg[3].
- Anthropoides's instance of is recorded as taxon[4].
- Anthropoides's taxon rank is recorded as genus[5].
- Anthropoides's parent taxon is recorded as Gruidae[6].
- Anthropoides's taxon name is recorded as Anthropoides[7].
- Anthropoides's Commons category is recorded as Grus[8].
- Anthropoides's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/09q089[9].
- Anthropoides's NCBI taxonomy ID is recorded as 1171716[10].
- Anthropoides's ITIS TSN is recorded as 176190[11].
- Anthropoides's GBIF taxon ID is recorded as 2474935[12].
- Anthropoides's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Anthropoides[13].
- Anthropoides's ZooBank ID for name or act is recorded as 474DA6A7-BF2A-4D59-AAD1-613A6D68966C[14].
- Anthropoides's Fauna Europaea ID is recorded as 96756[15].
- Anthropoides's Plazi ID is recorded as A7E1DA37-26D5-1F55-741A-071F02FB6BD3[16].
- Anthropoides's iNaturalist taxon ID is recorded as 144143[17].
- Anthropoides's NBN System Key is recorded as NHMSYS0000532827[18].
- Anthropoides's ADW taxon ID is recorded as Anthropoides[19].
- Anthropoides's Fauna Europaea New ID is recorded as 668b8cd5-22d6-457e-88c5-6212b2bdf677[20].
- Anthropoides's IRMNG ID is recorded as 1324927[21].
- Anthropoides's Belgian Species List ID is recorded as 53379[22].
- Anthropoides's NBIC scientific name ID is recorded as 4081[23].
- Anthropoides's Open Tree of Life ID is recorded as 881445[24].
- Anthropoides's Catalogue of Life ID is recorded as XHY[25].
- Anthropoides's Paleobiology Database taxon ID is recorded as 400257[26].
- Anthropoides's Yale LUX ID is recorded as concept/848bc278-e961-4f09-8e5f-9042fd2d4ca1[27].
Why It Matters
Anthropoides ranks in the top 0.83% of taxon entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1 views/month, #1,630 of 195,241).[2] Anthropoides has Wikipedia articles in 13 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] Anthropoides is known by 3 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]