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free_basic NE species Endemic · BR medium

Ctenostoma heydeni

Wiesner, 2006

Common name: Heydeni Tiger Beetle

Subtribe
Ctenostomina
Bioregion
Neotropical
Countries
1
Body length
14 mm
Habitat
arboreal
Activity
diurnal
Wings
macropterous

Distribution

Brazil (Espirito Santo)

Provinces: Espirito Santo

Flight period

I

Active January–December (year-round)

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

I-XII (year-round activity)

Key diagnostic characters

DIAGNOSIS — Ctenostoma Klug, 1821 Body medium, elongate ant-mimicking habitus of Ctenostomini. Diagnostic: comb-like (pectinate) maxillary palpi (Greek ktenos = comb, stoma = mouth) — unique to Ctenos

Precise distribution

BR

Confidence profile

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

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Taxonomic notes

Original combination: [orig. comb.] chaudoiri (Bates, 1869) (Bates, 1869)

Originally described as chaudoiri (Bates, 1869); transferred to Ctenostoma · Verified in Wiesner 2020 checklist

Synonym: Cicindela chaudoiri (Bates, 1869) [basionym]

Data quality: 72/100  ·  Source: GBIF; Wiesner2020; matrix-morphology  ·  Verified by V. Štrunc · Audited: 2026-05-13

Frequently asked

What is the Chaudoiri Tiger Beetle?
Ctenostoma (Neoprocephalus) are slender, metallic tiger beetles of the Neotropical canopy, creeping along live bark and branches after dark. Reaching around 14 mm, these nocturnal hunters belong to the remarkable comb-mouthed tribe Ctenostomini, whose larvae develop within burrows excavated in bar
Where does the Chaudoiri Tiger Beetle live?
It specialises in arboreal habitats. distributed across the Neotropical region. with records from SE Brazi