> >
free_basic NE species Endemic · AU medium

Rivacindela browni

Cassola, 1999

Common name: Browni Tiger Beetle

Tribe
Subtribe
Cicindelina
Bioregion
Australasian
Countries
1
Body length
14.5 mm
Habitat
coastal-sandy
Activity
diurnal
Wings
macropterous

Distribution

Australia (Western: Lake Austin)

Coastal habitatBiome: Coastal sandy
Provinces: Western

Flight period

I

Active October–March (peak Jan–Nov)

Similar to: Resembles Abroscelis, Antennaria, Archidela
II
III
IV
V
VI
VII
VIII
IX
X
XI
XII

X-III (rainfall-triggered, austral wet season)

Key diagnostic characters

DIAGNOSIS — *Rivacindela* Nidek, 1973 Body small to medium (8–13 mm), elongate-cursorial habitus. Head wider than pronotum; eyewith large, protuberant.

Precise distribution

AU

Confidence profile

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

Living Book · World Monograph 2026

Genera and Subgenera of Tiger Beetles

240 genera · 3,715 taxa · 194-character matrix · 12 months free updates

Pre-order €79 →

Taxonomic notes

Original combination: Rivacindela cardinalba (Cassola, 1999)

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

Frequently asked

What is the Cardinalba Tiger Beetle?
Rivacindela is an Australian endemic genus of tiger beetles haunting the bleached margins of salt lakes, halomorphic clay pans, and evaporation flats across the continent's arid interior. These nocturnal hunters range from 8 to 21 mm in body length, typically dark and matte in coloration — a stark
Where does the Cardinalba Tiger Beetle live?
It specialises in coastal sandy habitats. distributed across the Australasian region. with records from