brown tail moth - vertaling naar arabisch
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brown tail moth - vertaling naar arabisch

SPECIES OF INSECT
Browntail; Brown-Tail; Brown Tail; Brown tail; Euproctis chrysorrhoea; Brown-Tail Moth; Browntail moth; Brown Tail Moth; Euproctis chrysrrhoea; Brown-tail
  • Caterpillar, dorsal view, showing two red dots near tail

brown tail moth         
‎ العُثُّ الأَسْمَرُ الذَّيل,اليَبْرِيْقُ العَسْجَدِيّ‎
brown-tail moth         
العُثُّ الأَسْمَرُ الذَّيل
Euproctis chrysorrhoea         
‎ اليَبْريقُ العَسْجَدِيّ‎

Definitie

tail recursion
<programming> When the last thing a function (or procedure) does is to call itself. Such a function is called tail recursive. A function may make several recursive calls but a call is only tail-recursive if the caller returns immediately after it. E.g. f n = if n < 2 then 1 else f (f (n-2) + 1) In this example both calls to f are recursive but only the outer one is tail recursive. Tail recursion is a useful property because it enables {tail recursion optimisation}. If you aren't sick of them already, see recursion and {tail recursion}. [Jargon File] (2006-04-16)

Wikipedia

Brown-tail moth

The brown-tail moth (Euproctis chrysorrhoea) is a moth of the family Erebidae. It is native to Europe, neighboring countries in Asia, and the north coast of Africa. Descriptions of outbreaks, i.e., large population increases of several years duration, have been reported as far back as the 1500s. The life cycle of the moth is atypical, in that it spends approximately nine months (August to April) as larvae (caterpillars), leaving about one month each for pupae, imagos and eggs. Larvae (caterpillars) are covered in hairs. Two red spots on the back, toward the tail, distinguish these species from other similarly hairy moth larvae. The winged adults have white wings and a hairy white body with a tuft of brown hair at the tip of the abdomen. Females lay one egg cluster, usually on the underside of a leaf of a host plant. The species is polyphagous, meaning that it feeds on many different species of trees, including pear, apple, maple and oak.

This species was accidentally introduced to the United States in the 1890s. During the early 20th century it was present from eastern Connecticut northward into New Brunswick, Canada, but a subsequent severe population collapse reduced the territory to parts of coastal Maine and Cape Cod, Massachusetts, by the late 20th century. One theory for the decline appeared to be parasitism by a fly introduced to combat spongy moths. Starting in 2015 there has been a population spike and territory expansion in coastal Maine. In Europe, there are multiple parasitic and predator species, yet there is still a history of population outbreaks.

Hairs from the caterpillars are toxic for humans, causing a poison ivy-like itchy rash of up to sometimes weeks-long duration due to mechanical and chemical irritation. Direct contact with larvae is not necessary, as the hairs are shed and can become windblown. Toxins in the hairs remain potent for up to three years. Outdoor activities such as mowing a lawn or raking leaves in the fall can cause exposure.