View the above photo record (by Marius van Zyl) in LacewingMAP here.
Tomatares citrinus – Painted Grassland Antlion
(Hagen, 1853)
Identification
Size: Medium-Large (Wingspan up to 100mm)

Photo by Justin Bode
Tomatares citrinus is one of the regions most beautiful and brightly coloured antlion species. The body is black, white and yellow. The opaque wings are primarily white with bold black lines and bright yellow accents. The Antennae are noticeably short and stout.

Photo by Riaan Robbeson
Habitat
T. citrinus is a typical savanna-grassland species. Favours places with fairly tall, dense grass.
Behaviour

Photo by Neil Thomson
This species is easily detected when flushed from its resting place in thick grass. Tomatares citrinus is unusual in that it is a diurnal species.
Adults are active during late summer from December to April.
The larvae are known to live freely in soil among grass tussocks. They are voracious predators feeding mainly on other arthropods. The larvae are seldom encountered.
Status and Distribution
Tomatares citrinus is fairly widespread in the northern parts of South Africa. Despite its wide distribution, T. citrinus is an uncommon species. In South Africa T. citrinus is known from KwaZulu-Natal, FreeState, North-West, Gauteng, Mpumalanga and Limpopo. It has also been recorded from Namibia, Botswana, Zimbabwe and Mozambique.

Taxonomy
Order: Neuroptera Family: Myrmeleontidae Subfamily: Palparinae Tribe: Palparini Genus: Tomatares Species: citrinus

Photo by Steve Woodhall
Further Resources
Virtual Museum (LacewingMAP > Search VM > By Scientific or Common Name)
Acknowledgements:
The use of photographs by Justin Bode, Marius Van Zyl, Neil Thomson, Riaan Robbeson, Stephen Ball and Steve Woodhall is acknowledged. This species text has benefited enormously from comments made by Mervyn Mansell on records he has identified in LacewingMAP. We acknowledge his important contribution.
Recommended citation format for this species text:
Tippett RM 2022. Tomatares citrinus. Biodiversity and Development Institute, Cape Town.
Available online at http://thebdi.org/2022/08/13/tomatares-citrinus/

Photo by Stephen Ball

