World Tiger Beetles

Cicindelidae › Cicindelini › Cicindelina › Cicindela › Cicindela monticola tokatensis

Cicindela monticola tokatensis

Motschulsky, 1862 · Subspecies

Monticola Tiger Beetle

Nebraska Tiger Beetle (Cicindela nebraskana), coastal sandy habitat, Nearctic region

Description

Monticola 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 (British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba)…
Countries
Canada, Mexico, United States
Conservation
NE
Described by
Casey, 1897

Phenology

Active September–March (peak Oct–Dec)

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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 Nebraska 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 Nebraska Tiger Beetle live?

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

External resources

Data quality score: 58 · tier C_gbif_only