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Tag Archives: gall wasps

Oak galls: spangles & oysters

09 Saturday Sep 2017

Posted by sconzani in insects, nature, trees

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

gall wasps, galls on oak trees, Neuroterus albipes, Neuroterus anthracinus, Oak gall wasps, oak galls, oak tree, Oyster gall, Smotth spangle gall

I know you’re all just dying to find out more about oak galls, right? RIGHT? I also know that I covered spangles in a previous post (see Currants & spangles here) but there are two different spangle galls to be found on the much be-galled oak tree: one is the hairy Common spangle and this is the second, the Smooth spangle gall.

170909 Smooth spangle gall (1)

This pretty little gall comes in combinations of pink and yellowish-green. It’s the work of Neuroterus albipes, a tiny wasp that you will probably never see, and inside each colourful saucer is a single larva that you will also probably never see. The galls drop to the ground in autumn and the larvae pupate over winter then female-only wasps hatch out in Spring to lay eggs that cause the entirely different Schenck’s gall (not one I’ve yet seen), from which male and female wasp hatch in the summertime. And so the cycle begins again.

170909 Smooth spangle gall (2)
170909 Smooth spangle gall (3)
170909 Smooth spangle gall (4)

This second gall, the Oyster gall, is also caused by a tiny wasp that has two distinct generations and forms two different galls. The wasp is Neuroterus anthracinus and the Oyster gall also contains the agamic generation of wasps (i.e. the females that need no males to fertilise their eggs). As you can see, these galls form on the veins on the undersides of oak leaves – once they’ve fallen to the ground, you can still see the two brown flaps of tissue where they were attached to the veins. 

170909 Oak Oyster gall (1)
170909 Oak Oyster gall (2)

Once again, the sexual generation of wasps hatch in the Spring to mate and lay their eggs, this time in the buds of the oak tree, hence the name of the gall they produce: the April-bud gall. That’s another I need to look out for come the Spring.

170909 Oak Oyster gall (3)

 

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Oak galls: marbles and apples

24 Thursday Aug 2017

Posted by sconzani in insects, nature, trees

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Andricus kollari, Biorhiza pallida, gall wasps, galls on oak trees, Marble galls, Oak apple galls, Oak apples, oak galls, Oak marbles, oak tree

Though there are many more galls to be found on oak trees than the six I have covered in this and my previous two posts (knoppers and artichokes, and currants and spangles), I’ll make this the last lot for now. Otherwise, it might be just too galling for words!

170824 Andricus kollari Oak Marble gall (1)

So, to finish off this mini series, today we have Marble and Apple galls. Let’s start with the Marble galls and another tiny wasp, Andricus kollari, which lays its eggs on the twigs of any species of oak. This causes small perfectly round spheres to develop on these twigs. The spheres start off green but brown with age and will often remain on the twigs for a year or more. You can tell that the wasp has fled its larval home when you see tiny holes in the sphere. And although these do look just like brown marbles, I’m not sure you could use them to play the once-popular childhood game – they’re a little too light to shoot with.

170824 Andricus kollari Oak Marble gall (2)
170824 Andricus kollari Oak Marble gall (3)

And so to Oak apples. With their basic green colour and pink tinges, these do resemble immature apples but their surface texture and spongy feel are all wrong. The wasp Biorhiza pallida is the culprit this time, and these ‘apples’ contain several larvae, not just one.

170824 Biorhiza pallida Oak apple gall (3)
170824 Biorhiza pallida Oak apple gall (2)

Like many such wasps, both the Marble gall wasp and the Apple gall wasp have a sexual and an agamic (asexual) reproduction cycle. I have not seen the sexual galls produced by Andricus kollari which, interestingly, are produced only on Turkey oak (Quercus cerris) – the Marble galls are produced by the agamic (all female, no mating required) generation. Oak apple galls are produced by the sexual generation of Biorhiza pallida: the agamic generation lay their eggs on the roots of oak trees, so I haven’t seen those yet either.

170824 Biorhiza pallida Oak apple gall (1)

I find the whole concept of two different types of reproduction and, indeed, the way these wasps can cause such galls to form very intriguing!

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sconzani

sconzani

I'm a writer and photographer; researcher and blogger; birder and nature lover; countryside rambler and city strider; volunteer and biodiversity recorder.

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