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free NE species Endemic · US very large

Amblycheila hoversoni

Duran, Halffter & Schüle, 2010

Common name: Hoverson's Giant Tiger Beetle

Tribe
Subtribe
none
Bioregion
Nearctic
Countries
1
Body length
33.5 mm
Habitat
open-ground
Activity
nocturnal
Wings
apterous

Distribution

USA (Texas)

Open Sandy habitatBiome: Open arid
Provinces: Texas

Flight period

I

Active July–October (peak Aug–Sep)

Similar to: Resembles Omus
II
III
IV
V
VI
VII
VIII
IX
X
XI
XII

IV-XI (excl. VI); most active after rain in spring and fall

Key diagnostic characters

DIAGNOSIS — *Amblycheila* Say, 1830 Body large (22–35 mm), the largest Nearctic cicindelids; habituwith robust, elongate-cylindrical. Dorsum entirely matte black to dark brown, lacking metallic irides

Precise distribution

US

Confidence profile

geo:M|bio:H|morph:H|pheno:I|elev:I|obs:M

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Taxonomic notes

Original combination: Amblycheila katzi (Duran & Schüle, 2014)

Data quality: 75/100  ·  Source: GBIF; Wiesner2020; matrix-morphology  ·  Verified by V. Štrunc · Audited: 2026-05-13

Frequently asked

What is the Katz's Giant Tiger Beetle?
Amblycheila is the largest genus of tiger beetles in North America, with robust, cylindrical bodies reaching 37 mm in length. These wholly matte-black, flightless-looking hunters are strictly nocturnal, prowling compacted soils and open arid ground under cover of darkness. Eight species range acro
Where does the Katz's Giant Tiger Beetle live?
It specialises in open ground habitats. distributed across the Nearctic region. with records from US
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