Cicindela, commonly known as common tiger beetles,[1] are generally brightly colored and metallic beetles, often with some sort of patterning of ivory or cream-colored markings.
They are most abundant and diverse in habitats very often near bodies of water with sandy or occasionally clay soils; they can be found along rivers, sea and lake shores, sand dunes, around dry lakebeds, on clay banks, or woodland paths.
This comes from the fact that members of the genus Cicindela are metallic and sometimes flashing.
The status of the genus is constantly in a state of flux, as various authorities on different continents have vastly different opinions about which (if any) of the dozens of subgenera traditionally recognized within the genus are deserving of being accorded status as independent genera.
Treated as a single genus, and even with a fairly conservative estimate of species, there are over 850[2] (or even up to 2,300) species in the group[3] (thus being almost equal to the subtribe Cicindelina (W.Horn, 1908), with several thousand published names applied, collectively.