gall wasp

insect
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Also known as: Cynipidae, cynipid wasp

gall wasp, (family Cynipidae), any of about 1,300 species of small wasps that are notable for their ability to stimulate the growth of galls (tissue swellings) on plants. Some gall wasp species are gall inquilines, meaning they do not cause the formation of galls but inhabit those made by other insects. Most gall wasps are not economically important. However, the galls of some species have been used as a source of tannic acid or in the manufacture of inks or dyes.

Taxonomy

See also list of ants, bees, and wasps.

Natural history

A given species of gall wasp will cause a characteristic type of gall to form on a certain part of a particular species of plant. Many of these wasps attack oak trees or rose plants.

Male gall wasps are rare, and reproduction usually occurs by parthenogenesis (i.e., female larvae develop from unfertilized eggs). The egg passes through the long ovipositor of the female and into the plant tissue. After the egg hatches into a larva, it begins to secrete materials that cause the plant tissues around it to begin to grow faster than normal. The gall increases in size as the larva grows. The larva feeds on the plant tissue within the gall and pupates and transforms into an adult within the gall. Adults are typically about 6 to 8 mm (about 0.25 to 0.30 inch) long and black in color. The shiny abdomen is oval, and the thorax has a sculptured appearance.

Lion (panthera leo)
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Major species

There are approximately 600 species of gall wasps that occur in North America. The bedeguar gall (also called moss gall, or robin’s pincushion), which may contain about 50 or more larvae, is commonly seen on rose bushes and is caused by the gall wasp Diplolepis rosae.

The so-called oak apple, a round, spongy, fruitlike object about 2.5 to 5 cm (1 to 2 inches) in diameter, is caused by the larvae of the gall wasp Biorhiza pallida. About 30 such larvae may develop in a single “apple,” or gall.

The marble gall, a green or brown growth about 2.5 cm (1 inch) in diameter, is caused by Andricus kollari.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by Melissa Petruzzello.