Cassidinae
0 sources
Cassidinae
Summary
Cassidinae is a taxon[1]. Cassidinae ranks in the top 0.8% of taxon entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (94 views/month, #1,570 of 195,241).[2]
Key Facts
- Cassidinae's image is recorded as Hispid beetle.jpg[3].
- Cassidinae's instance of is recorded as taxon[4].
- Cassidinae's taxon rank is recorded as subfamily[5].
- Cassidinae's parent taxon is recorded as Chrysomelidae[6].
- Cassidinae's taxon name is recorded as Cassidinae[7].
- Cassidinae's Commons category is recorded as Cassidinae[8].
- Cassidinae's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/026v8k7[9].
- Cassidinae's NCBI taxonomy ID is recorded as 107219[10].
- Cassidinae's ITIS TSN is recorded as 719576[11].
- Cassidinae's BioLib taxon ID is recorded as 12210[12].
- Cassidinae's Fossilworks taxon ID is recorded as 207310[13].
- Cassidinae's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Cassidinae[14].
- Cassidinae's Encyclopædia Britannica Online ID is recorded as animal/tortoise-beetle[15].
- Cassidinae's taxon synonym is recorded as Hispinae[16].
- Cassidinae's taxon common name is recorded as {'lang': 'en', 'text': 'Tortoise Beetles and the Hispines'}[17].
- Cassidinae's taxon common name is recorded as {'lang': 'nb', 'text': 'skjoldbiller'}[18].
- Cassidinae's Fauna Europaea ID is recorded as 243382[19].
- Cassidinae's Dyntaxa ID is recorded as 1009087[20].
- Cassidinae's BugGuide taxon ID is recorded as 308[21].
- Cassidinae's New Zealand Organisms Register ID is recorded as a1e2917e-c683-4538-9c28-ec42f5dcf01d[22].
- Cassidinae's UMLS CUI is recorded as C1050049[23].
- Cassidinae's iNaturalist taxon ID is recorded as 52064[24].
- Cassidinae's NBN System Key is recorded as NHMSYS0020151612[25].
- Cassidinae's Great Norwegian Encyclopedia ID is recorded as skjoldbiller[26].
- Cassidinae's Fauna Europaea New ID is recorded as b444abfe-0f71-4c84-9688-f188c8fa5240[27].
Why It Matters
Cassidinae ranks in the top 0.8% of taxon entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (94 views/month, #1,570 of 195,241).[2] Cassidinae has Wikipedia articles in 11 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] Cassidinae is known by 7 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]