Caraboidea
0 sources
Caraboidea
Summary
Caraboidea is a taxon[1]. Caraboidea ranks in the top 0.83% of taxon entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (8 views/month, #1,624 of 195,241).[2]
Key Facts
- Caraboidea's image is recorded as Clinidium baldufi01.jpg[3].
- Caraboidea's instance of is recorded as taxon[4].
- Caraboidea's taxon rank is recorded as superfamily[5].
- Caraboidea's parent taxon is recorded as Adephaga[6].
- Caraboidea's taxon name is recorded as Caraboidea[7].
- Caraboidea's Commons category is recorded as Caraboidea[8].
- Caraboidea's NCBI taxonomy ID is recorded as 535382[9].
- Caraboidea's Fossilworks taxon ID is recorded as 69179[10].
- Caraboidea's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Caraboidea[11].
- Caraboidea's taxon common name is recorded as {'lang': 'ja', 'text': 'オサムシ上科'}[12].
- Caraboidea's taxon common name is recorded as {'lang': 'ru', 'text': 'Карабоидные'}[13].
- Caraboidea's taxon common name is recorded as {'lang': 'zh', 'text': '步行蟲總科'}[14].
- Caraboidea's taxon common name is recorded as {'lang': 'en', 'text': 'caraboid'}[15].
- Caraboidea's Fauna Europaea ID is recorded as 11004[16].
- Caraboidea's Dyntaxa ID is recorded as 2003020[17].
- Caraboidea's Google Knowledge Graph ID is recorded as /g/1231ggd0[18].
- Caraboidea's New Zealand Organisms Register ID is recorded as 8440c367-472b-4ef1-80d4-5b4655a17335[19].
- Caraboidea's UMLS CUI is recorded as C2640801[20].
- Caraboidea's iNaturalist taxon ID is recorded as 372884[21].
- Caraboidea's Fauna Europaea New ID is recorded as 33b02cf1-1c2e-4e27-b289-14b43848b9dc[22].
- Caraboidea's Australian Faunal Directory ID is recorded as Caraboidea[23].
- Caraboidea's NBIC scientific name ID is recorded as 5275[24].
- Caraboidea's Open Tree of Life ID is recorded as 829184[25].
- Caraboidea's Catalogue of Life ID is recorded as 4WK[26].
Why It Matters
Caraboidea ranks in the top 0.83% of taxon entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (8 views/month, #1,624 of 195,241).[2] Caraboidea has Wikipedia articles in 8 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[27]