enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. List of insect galls - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_insect_galls

    Download QR code; Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; ... This is a list of insect galls arranged into families.

  3. Gall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gall

    To form galls, the insects must take advantage of the time when plant cell division occurs quickly: the growing season, usually spring in temperate climates, but which is extended in the tropics. The meristems , where plant cell division occurs, are the usual sites of galls, though insect galls can be found on other parts of the plant, such as ...

  4. Andricus quercuscalifornicus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andricus_quercuscalifornicus

    Often multiple wasps in different life stages occupy the same gall. The induced galls help establish complex insect communities, promoting the diversification in niche differentiation. Furthermore, the adaptive value of these galls could be attributed their ecological benefits such as nutrition, provision of microenvironment, and enemy avoidance.

  5. Gall-inducing insect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gall-inducing_insect

    Galls are growth deformities induced in certain plants by various insects which are mostly species-specific. Galls induced by insects can be viewed as an extended phenotype of the inducing insect, and gall-inducing insects specialize on their host plants, often to a greater extent than insects that feed on the same plant without creating galls. [2]

  6. Andricus foecundatrix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andricus_foecundatrix

    Andricus foecundatrix (formerly Andricus fecundator) is a parthenogenetic gall wasp which lays a single egg within a leaf bud, using its ovipositor, to produce a gall known as an oak artichoke gall, oak hop gall, larch-cone gall or hop strobile [1] [2] The gall develops as a chemically induced distortion of leaf axillary or terminal buds on pedunculate oak (Quercus robur) or sessile oak ...

  7. Diplolepis mayri - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diplolepis_mayri

    In the winter time galls of D. mayri are often opened by predators just as are the galls of D. rosae.These predators may be birds as in the case of other Cynipidae galls: for D. rosae the lesser spotted woodpecker (Picoides minor), [2] for Andricus spp. and Neuroterus spp. the great tit (Parus major).

  8. Rhopalomyia solidaginis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhopalomyia_solidaginis

    Rhopalomyia solidaginis, the goldenrod bunch gall, is a species of gall midges, insects in the family Cecidomyiidae. The galls of this species have the following host species of goldenrods: Solidago altissima, Solidago canadensis, and Solidago rugosa. They have been found across eastern North America.

  9. Witch-hazel cone gall aphid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Witch-hazel_cone_gall_aphid

    Gall's interior Witch Hazel Cone Galls. H. hamamelidis have three generations per year, each with a different part in the life cycle. At the start of spring, females or stem mothers crawl to witch-hazel leaf buds. As the leaf grows, the aphid injects it with a substance, possibly an enzyme or hormone, that