Cicindela tranquebarica

Cicindela tranquebarica, the oblique-lined tiger beetle, is a species of flashy tiger beetle in the family Carabidae. It is found in North America.[1][2][3][4]

Cicindela tranquebarica
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Coleoptera
Family: Carabidae
Genus: Cicindela
Species:
C. tranquebarica
Binomial name
Cicindela tranquebarica
Herbst, 1806

Subspecies

These 11 subspecies belong to the species Cicindela tranquebarica:

  • Cicindela tranquebarica arida A. C. Davis, 1928 (oblique-lined tiger beetle)
  • Cicindela tranquebarica cibecuei Duncan, 1958
  • Cicindela tranquebarica diffracta Casey, 1909 (diffracted tiger beetle)
  • Cicindela tranquebarica inyo Fall, 1917 (oblique-lined tiger beetle)
  • Cicindela tranquebarica joaquinensis Knisley & Haines, 2007 (Joaquin tiger beetle)
  • Cicindela tranquebarica kirbyi LeConte, 1867 (oblique-lined tiger beetle)
  • Cicindela tranquebarica parallelonota Casey, 1914 (oblique-lined tiger beetle)
  • Cicindela tranquebarica sierra Leng, 1902 (sierra tiger beetle)
  • Cicindela tranquebarica tranquebarica Herbst, 1806 (oblique-lined tiger beetle)
  • Cicindela tranquebarica vibex G. Horn, 1867 (wealed tiger beetle)
  • Cicindela tranquebarica viridissima Fall, 1910 (greenest tiger beetle)
gollark: If you want long timescales or detailed predictions then weather prediction is really hard, but the simple rule of "low pressure means problems" is fairly accurate because something something air from other places moves in.
gollark: No dubious "chaos theory" involved.
gollark: This sounds basically right.
gollark: It's not a butterfly effect thing?
gollark: It's not impossible that their joints could react to air pressure somehow. And you can do very coarse weather prediction off air pressure trends.

References

  1. "Cicindela tranquebarica Report". Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved 2019-09-25.
  2. "Cicindela tranquebarica". GBIF. Retrieved 2019-09-25.
  3. Bousquet, Yves (2012). "Catalogue of Geadephaga (Coleoptera, Adephaga) of America, north of Mexico". ZooKeys (245): 1–1722. doi:10.3897/zookeys.245.3416. PMC 3577090. PMID 23431087.

Further reading

  • Allen, Thomas J.; Acciavatti, Robert E. (2002). Tiger Beetles of West Virginia (PDF). West Virginia Department of Natural Resources.
  • Lobl, I.; Smetana, A., eds. (2017). Catalogue of Palaearctic Coleoptera, Volume 1: Archostemata - Myxophaga - Adephaga. Apollo Books. ISBN 978-90-04-33029-0.


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