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Domain > phorid.net
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Is this malicious?
Yes
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Whois
Property
Value
NameServer
NS3552.HOSTGATOR.COM
Created
2003-06-23 00:00:00
Changed
2015-08-08 00:00:00
Expires
2016-06-23 00:00:00
Registrar
TUCOWS DOMAINS INC.
DNS Resolutions
Date
IP Address
2024-09-13
192.232.216.122
(
ClassC
)
Port 80
HTTP/1.1 200 OKDate: Fri, 13 Sep 2024 06:23:07 GMTServer: nginx/1.21.6Content-Type: text/html; charsetUTF-8Expires: Thu, 19 Nov 1981 08:52:00 GMTCache-Control: no-store, no-cache, must-revalidatePragma: no-cacheVary: Accept-EncodingX-Server-Cache: trueX-Proxy-Cache: MISSSet-Cookie: PHPSESSID03af0b2a2bb34d7ebee72ef29bf80ef4; path/Transfer-Encoding: chunked !DOCTYPE html>html langen>head> meta charsetutf-8/> title>phorid.net home/title> link relstylesheet href./css/styles.css>/head>body>div classframer>header classtopline>h1 classtclass5> phorid.net/h1>br>div classcharms>img classspaced srchttp://phorid.net/apocephalus/images/logo-NSF.png>img classspaced srchttp://phorid.net/apocephalus/images/eolsmall1.jpg>img classspaced2 srchttp://phorid.net/apocephalus/images/nhm_logo.jpg>/div>h1 classtclass2>online data for phorid flies/h1>hr classtoprule> /header> div classnavbox>div classtopmenu1>a classmt stylemargin-bottom: 5px hrefhttp://phorid.net/index.php>HOME/a>/div>div classtopmenu1 >a classmt hrefhttp://phorid.net/automatex/index.php>AUTOMATEX/a>/div>div classtopmenu1 >a classmt hrefhttp://phorid.net/pcat>PCAT/a>/div>div classtopmenu1 >a classmt href./gallery.php>PHOTOS/a>/div>div classtopmenu1 >a classmt hrefhttp://phorid.net/bioscan.php>BioSCAN/a>/div>div classtopmenu1 >a classmt hrefhttp://phorid.net/phoridae/newsletters.php>Phorid Newsletters/a>/div>/div> div classframer2 styleclear:left> div classrightcol>h2>Resources/h2>p>a classmt hrefhttp://phorid.net/pcat>Online phorid catalog (PCAT)/a>/p>p>a classmt hrefhttp://phorid.net/apocephalus>em>Apocephalus/em>/a>/p>p>em>Dohrniphora/em>/p>p>em>Melaloncha/em>/p>p>em>Myriophora/em>/p>h2>Featured articles/h2>p>Worlds smallest fly/p>p>a classmt href./beekeepers.php>Phorids for beekeepers/a>/p>p>a classmt href./hmds.php>HMDS: an alternative to critical point drying/a>/p>p>a classmt hrefhttp://phorid.net/scalaris_page.jpg>How to recognize i>Megaselia scalaris/i>, the most commonly seen phorid/a>/p> p>a classmt hrefhttp://phorid.net/phoridae/crisis_index.html>Crisis in Neotropical Dipterology paper/a>/p>/div> div classcontentPN> article> div stylefloat:right; width:30%; margin:10px>span stylecolor:#16abcc;>b>WEIRD PHORIDS/b>span>br>img src/images/Fig1.jpg classhomepage style>/img>/div>p>Phoridae are a large group of thousands of species of small flies. They are one of the most spectacular groups of flies In terms of diversity of body types, and variety of life histories. They range in size from about 6 mm in length down to 0.4 mm, the worlds smallest fly./p> p>Their life histories are classified mostly by the way the larva (or maggot) feeds. Thus, we have scavengers, plant. feeders, fungus feeders, predators, parasitoids, and true parasites. Based on what we know so far, most phorid flies are parasitoids, laying their eggs in a single host, which is subsequently killed by larval feeding. Most parasitoids feed on ants, bees, or millipedes, groups for which studies have been done. The vast majority of phorids, however, have not been studied and their life histories are completely unknown./p> p>Phorids are found around the world, being diverse on Arctic tundra, temperate forests, tropical rain forests, tropical dry forests, grasslands-really, anywhere except the most barren, dry, and cold places on the planet. Nobody knows how many species of phorids there are in the world, but we estimate the current total of about 4000 species is 10% or less of the true fauna./p>img srcimages/apo_wallaceorum_lateral.jpg classhomepage2>/img> p>Within the phorids there is one giant group, the genus i>Megaselia/i>, and about 200 other genera. The diversity of i>Megaselia/i> is assumed to be an enormous, and the 1400 species currently described is just a drop in the bucket. Careful studies have shown that many species are extremely similar, and require detailed genitalia drawings to portray their differences. Molecular studies are showing that there are indeed an incredible number of species of these flies./p> p>Other phorids can also be large groups, with the genera i>Apocephalus/i> (the ant decapitating flies), i>Dohrniphora, Melaloncha, Myriophora/i>, and i>Coniceromyia/i> also having hundreds of species. More information on diversity can be found at the a href./pcat classregtext>phorid catalog (PCAT) site/a>./p>/article>/div> /div> /div> /body>/html>
Port 443
HTTP/1.1 200 OKDate: Fri, 13 Sep 2024 06:23:09 GMTServer: nginx/1.21.6Content-Type: text/html; charsetUTF-8Expires: Thu, 19 Nov 1981 08:52:00 GMTCache-Control: no-store, no-cache, must-revalidatePragma: no-cacheVary: Accept-EncodingX-Server-Cache: trueX-Proxy-Cache: MISSSet-Cookie: PHPSESSIDbc225a7585a52b525896ce8cec273832; path/Transfer-Encoding: chunked !DOCTYPE html>html langen>head> meta charsetutf-8/> title>phorid.net home/title> link relstylesheet href./css/styles.css>/head>body>div classframer>header classtopline>h1 classtclass5> phorid.net/h1>br>div classcharms>img classspaced srchttp://phorid.net/apocephalus/images/logo-NSF.png>img classspaced srchttp://phorid.net/apocephalus/images/eolsmall1.jpg>img classspaced2 srchttp://phorid.net/apocephalus/images/nhm_logo.jpg>/div>h1 classtclass2>online data for phorid flies/h1>hr classtoprule> /header> div classnavbox>div classtopmenu1>a classmt stylemargin-bottom: 5px hrefhttp://phorid.net/index.php>HOME/a>/div>div classtopmenu1 >a classmt hrefhttp://phorid.net/automatex/index.php>AUTOMATEX/a>/div>div classtopmenu1 >a classmt hrefhttp://phorid.net/pcat>PCAT/a>/div>div classtopmenu1 >a classmt href./gallery.php>PHOTOS/a>/div>div classtopmenu1 >a classmt hrefhttp://phorid.net/bioscan.php>BioSCAN/a>/div>div classtopmenu1 >a classmt hrefhttp://phorid.net/phoridae/newsletters.php>Phorid Newsletters/a>/div>/div> div classframer2 styleclear:left> div classrightcol>h2>Resources/h2>p>a classmt hrefhttp://phorid.net/pcat>Online phorid catalog (PCAT)/a>/p>p>a classmt hrefhttp://phorid.net/apocephalus>em>Apocephalus/em>/a>/p>p>em>Dohrniphora/em>/p>p>em>Melaloncha/em>/p>p>em>Myriophora/em>/p>h2>Featured articles/h2>p>Worlds smallest fly/p>p>a classmt href./beekeepers.php>Phorids for beekeepers/a>/p>p>a classmt href./hmds.php>HMDS: an alternative to critical point drying/a>/p>p>a classmt hrefhttp://phorid.net/scalaris_page.jpg>How to recognize i>Megaselia scalaris/i>, the most commonly seen phorid/a>/p> p>a classmt hrefhttp://phorid.net/phoridae/crisis_index.html>Crisis in Neotropical Dipterology paper/a>/p>/div> div classcontentPN> article> div stylefloat:right; width:30%; margin:10px>span stylecolor:#16abcc;>b>WEIRD PHORIDS/b>span>br>img src/images/Fig1.jpg classhomepage style>/img>/div>p>Phoridae are a large group of thousands of species of small flies. They are one of the most spectacular groups of flies In terms of diversity of body types, and variety of life histories. They range in size from about 6 mm in length down to 0.4 mm, the worlds smallest fly./p> p>Their life histories are classified mostly by the way the larva (or maggot) feeds. Thus, we have scavengers, plant. feeders, fungus feeders, predators, parasitoids, and true parasites. Based on what we know so far, most phorid flies are parasitoids, laying their eggs in a single host, which is subsequently killed by larval feeding. Most parasitoids feed on ants, bees, or millipedes, groups for which studies have been done. The vast majority of phorids, however, have not been studied and their life histories are completely unknown./p> p>Phorids are found around the world, being diverse on Arctic tundra, temperate forests, tropical rain forests, tropical dry forests, grasslands-really, anywhere except the most barren, dry, and cold places on the planet. Nobody knows how many species of phorids there are in the world, but we estimate the current total of about 4000 species is 10% or less of the true fauna./p>img srcimages/apo_wallaceorum_lateral.jpg classhomepage2>/img> p>Within the phorids there is one giant group, the genus i>Megaselia/i>, and about 200 other genera. The diversity of i>Megaselia/i> is assumed to be an enormous, and the 1400 species currently described is just a drop in the bucket. Careful studies have shown that many species are extremely similar, and require detailed genitalia drawings to portray their differences. Molecular studies are showing that there are indeed an incredible number of species of these flies./p> p>Other phorids can also be large groups, with the genera i>Apocephalus/i> (the ant decapitating flies), i>Dohrniphora, Melaloncha, Myriophora/i>, and i>Coniceromyia/i> also having hundreds of species. More information on diversity can be found at the a href./pcat classregtext>phorid catalog (PCAT) site/a>./p>/article>/div> /div> /div> /body>/html>
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