Amphibolips quercusjuglans
(agamic)agamic:The agamic (AKA unisexual) generation of an oak gall wasp (cynipini) species consists of only female wasps, which do not mate before laying the eggs which become the male and females of the sexual generation (sexgen).
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The gall's range is computed from the range of all hosts that the gall occurs on. In some cases we have evidence that the gall does not occur across the full range of the hosts and we will remove these places from the range. For undescribed species we will show the expected range based on hosts plus where the galls have been observed.
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from similar galls and/or important information about the taxonomic status of
this gall inducer.
Created Feb 4, 2026 1:47 PM UTC
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Last updated Feb 4, 2026 1:47 PM UTC
On the Insects, Coleopterous, Hymenopterous & Dipterous: Inhabiting the Galls of Certain Species of Willow. Pt 1st--Diptera
BD Walsh
(1864)
Amphibolips prunus [new name]
I found last August and early in September, in very great numbers both on Q. rubra and Q. tinctoria, growing on the side of the cup of the acorn, a globular, smooth, plum-like, fleshy, intensely bitter gall, about .50-.75 inch in diameter, mottled with yellowish and crimson outside, and internally yellowish in the centre and towards the circumference pink like a watermelon. This gall, of which I forwarded a specimen to Baron Osten Sacken, is thought by him to be identical with his Q. juglans, which was described only from dry, shrivelled-up specimens, and which was stated by Mr. Hitz who found it "to grow on the branches of the White Oak," (Q. alba.) a species that belongs to the first section of Quercus. Either Mr. Hitz must have been mistaken, both as to the tree and the part of the tree on which he found Q. juglans O. S., or else my gall is a distinct species. If so, I propose for it the name of Q. prunus. It is the only N. A. Cynipidous gall known so far to grow on the acorn, though, judging from the names, the European Cynipidous galls, q. calicis and q. baccarum, grow the one on the cup of the acorn, like Q. prunus, and the other on the acorn itself.