Cicindela sexguttata

[citation needed] They are commonly found in deciduous forests in between Minnesota,[2] southeastern Canada[1] and south to eastern Texas,[3] excluding the Florida Panhandle,[1] and are easily recognizable by their large, white, overlapping mandibles.

While tiger beetles are voracious predators of small arthropods, they do not bite humans unless handled.

Both the common name and the species name refer to the six small white spots on the beetle's metallic-green to metallic-blue-green elytra.

This species is associated with wooded areas and they are often found in sunlit patches clear of undergrowth such as dirt paths and fallen logs where they hunt caterpillars, ants, spiders, and many other kinds of arthropods.

Here they lie in wait until small arthropods pass by, at which time the larvae lunge out of their burrows at their prey.