216 DRY AND MESOPHYTIC FOREST COMMUNITIES 
THe Biurr Forest 
Fic. 171.—An open place in the oak and hickory forest of a Tennessee mountain- 
side, a typical green tiger-beetle (Cicindela sexguttata) habitat. The individuals were 
seen copulating on the log in the foreground. The general aspect is very similar to 
that of the bluff forest. (Reprinted from the Journal of Morphology.) 
172 (hye 
Fic. 172.—The black dots represent the distribution of the larvae of C. sexguttata 
from eggs laid in a cage. The larvae are in the exact position in which eggs are laid. 
The stippled area is in shadow in the middle of the day. 
Fic. 173.—Diagram of a burrow of Cicindela sexguttata. 
