World Tiger Beetles

Cicindelidae › Cicindelini › Cicindelina › Cicindela › Cicindela lewisii sinicola

Cicindela lewisii sinicola

Horn, 1897 · Subspecies

Lewisii Tiger Beetle

Common Claybank Tiger Beetle (Cicindela limbalis), coastal sandy habitat, Nearctic region

Description

Lewisii Tiger Beetle, 14mm, coastal sandy specialist, diurnal, Palearctic — tiger beetle data, photos & distribution.

Key characters

Body 8–18 mm, elongate-cursorial; head wider than pronotum; eyes large, protuberant; ground color metallic with white maculation bands.

Diagnosis

DIAGNOSIS — Cicindela Linnaeus, 1758 Type genus of Cicindelidae. Body 8–18 mm, elongate-cursorial; head wider than pronotum; eyes large, protuberant; ground color metallic with white maculation bands.

Facts

Tribe
Cicindelini
Subtribe
Cicindelina
Body length
14 mm
Size class
medium
Habitat
coastal-sandy
Activity
diurnal
Wings
macropterous
Bioregion
Palearctic
Distribution
Canada (Northwest Territories, British Columbia, Alberta…
Countries
Canada, United States
Conservation
NE
Described by
Klug, 1834

Phenology

Active April–August (peak Apr–Jun)

IIIIIIIVVVIVIIVIIIIXXXIXII

Etymology

From Latin *cicindela* (glow-worm, firefly) — used by Pliny the Elder for luminous insects; refers to the iridescent elytra (feminine).

FAQ

What is the Common Claybank Tiger Beetle?

Among Africa's most specialized tiger beetles, *Cicindela* (Austrocicindela) haunts the bark and wood of forest trees rather than open ground — a rare arboreal lifestyle in the family. Nocturnal hunters, their larvae develop in burrows within bark. This small subgenus of four species represents a st

Where does the Common Claybank Tiger Beetle live?

It specialises in coastal sandy habitats. distributed across the Nearctic region. with records

External resources

Data quality score: 58 · tier C_gbif_only