Callirhytis pedunculata
(sexgen)sexgen:The sexual generation (AKA bisexual generation or sexgen) of an oak gall wasp (cynipini) species consists of both male and female wasps, which mate before the females lay eggs which will mature to form the all-female agamic generation.
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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.
Created Feb 4, 2026 1:47 PM UTC
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Last updated Feb 4, 2026 1:47 PM UTC
New Species of North American Cynipidae (1890)
HF Bassett
(1890)
Dryophanta pedunculata n.sp.
Galls growing on slender peduncles on the edge of the leaves of Q. rubra and Q. coccinea. The peduncles are from one-fourth to one-half an inch in length and are plainly the prolongation of lateral leaf veins. They are usually flattened, and in some cases bordered on one side for nearly the whole length with a very narrow extension of the leaf blade itself. When dry they are often twisted like the stems of the moss Funaria hygrometrica. The gall is ovate, with a long, curved point. It measures one-eighth by three-sixteenths of an inch exclusive of the tip. When fresh it is smooth, and has a somewhat glaucus hue, which mostly disappears in drying, changing to a dark, dirty olive-brown. It is extremely thin, and is hollow, except the free, smooth, oval larval cell. This cell is .05 by .10 of an inch, and is extremely fragile.
This gall differs from Andrlcus capsula Bass, in size, being much larger, and in shape the latter being as long, but only half as thick, and also in color, which in either species is constant. But the free larval cell in D. pedunculata, and its entire absence in A. capsula is the most striking difference.