> >
free NE species Endemic · PH large ★ 6.8 Iridescent

Tricondyla fulgida

(Bates, 1874)

Common name: Fulgida Tiger Beetle

Tribe
Subtribe
Tricondylina
Bioregion
Australasian
Countries
1
Body length
23.5 mm
Habitat
arboreal
Activity
diurnal
Wings
apterous

Distribution

Papua New Guinea (Rossell Isl.)

Provinces: Rossell Isl.

Flight period

I

Active June–October (peak Jul–Aug)

Similar to: Resembles Collyris, Derocrania, Neocollyris
II
III
IV
V
VI
VII
VIII
IX
X
XI
XII

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

Key diagnostic characters

DIAGNOSIS — Tricondyla Latreille, 1822 Body 14–20 mm, elongate Collyridini with strongly cylindrical pronotum and ant-mimicking habitus. Distinguished from Neocollyris by larger body size (14–20 vs 8–

Precise distribution

PG

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: [orig. comb.] gracilis (Bates, 1874) (Bates, 1874)

Originally described as gracilis (Bates, 1874); transferred to Tricondyla · Verified in Wiesner 2020 checklist

Synonym: Cicindela gracilis (Bates, 1874) [basionym]

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

Frequently asked

What is the Gracilis Tiger Beetle?
Tricondyla are large, elongate tiger beetles of Oriental forests, their cylindrical bodies perfectly suited to life on the bark and branches of tropical trees. Nocturnal hunters, they move across dead trunks after dark, while their larvae develop hidden within bark burrows. With roughly 15 species
Where does the Gracilis Tiger Beetle live?
It specialises in arboreal habitats. distributed across the Oriental region. with records from Philippines (