World Tiger Beetles

Cicindelidae › Collyridini › Tricondylina › Tricondyla › Tricondyla ventricosa ventricosa

Tricondyla ventricosa ventricosa

(Bates, 1874) · Subspecies

Ventricosa Tiger Beetle

Annulicornis Tiger Beetle (Tricondyla annulicornis), arboreal habitat, Oriental region

Description

Ventricosa Tiger Beetle, 23.5mm, arboreal specialist, diurnal, Oriental — tiger beetle data, photos & distribution.

Key characters

Distinguished from Neocollyris by larger body size (14–20 vs 8–

Diagnosis

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–

Facts

Tribe
Collyridini
Subtribe
Tricondylina
Body length
23.5 mm
Size class
large
Habitat
arboreal
Activity
diurnal
Wings
apterous
Bioregion
Oriental
Distribution
Myanmar, Cambodia, Vietnam, Malaysia (Malacca)
Countries
Cambodia, Myanmar, Malaysia, Vietnam
Conservation
NE
Described by
Bates, 1874

Phenology

Active June–October (peak Jul–Aug)

IIIIIIIVVVIVIIVIIIIXXXIXII

Etymology

From Greek *tri-* (three) + *kóndylos* (knuckle, joint) — referring to characteristic body proportions or articulations.

FAQ

What is the Annulicornis 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 Annulicornis Tiger Beetle live?

It specialises in arboreal habitats. distributed across the Oriental region. with records from Myanm

External resources

Data quality score: 75 · tier A_verified