Neocicindela latecincta

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Phylum:Arthropoda
Class:Insecta
Suborder:Adephaga
Neocicindela latecincta
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Coleoptera
Suborder: Adephaga
Family: Cicindelidae
Genus: Neocicindela
Species:
N. latecincta
Binomial name
Neocicindela latecincta
White, 1846

Neocicindela latecincta, commonly known as the wide-banded tiger beetle, is a species of tiger beetle found across New Zealand's South Island.[1]

An adult's body length is 11-13.3 mm,[2] which is unusually small for tiger beetles.[3] The head and pronotum of the beetle are a dark brown.[2] The elytra are mostly dark brown in the center with a light-yellow wavy patch on the outsides of the elytra. An oblique band (wider than in Neocicindela tuberculata) doesn’t extend past the base of the apical lunule (a crescent shaped marking at the tip of the elytra).[2] There is a row of small or poorly developed green foveae (small depressions found on the beetle's exoskeleton) on the elytra.[2] There is a green metallic lustre (a shiny appearance caused by structures of the exoskeleton rather than pigmentation) on the dark areas of the elytra, pronotum and top of its head.[2] The tarsal claws (small hook like feet at the end of an insect's legs) are about five times shorter than segment five. The tarsi and tibiae are mostly pale in colour.[2]

Global range

The wide-banded tiger beetle is endemic to the South Island of New Zealand.[4]

Habitat

Cultural uses

References

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