Celticecis wellsi

Family: Cecidomyiidae | Genus: Celticecis
Detachable: detachable
Color: brown, gray, green
Texture: hairy
Abundance:
Shape:
Season:
Related:
Alignment: erect
Walls: thick
Location: lower leaf, leaf midrib, on leaf veins, at leaf vein angles
Form:
Cells:
Possible Range:i
Common Name(s):
Synonymy:
Pending...
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image of Celticecis wellsi
image of Celticecis wellsi
image of Celticecis wellsi
image of Celticecis wellsi
image of Celticecis wellsi
image of Celticecis wellsi
image of Celticecis wellsi
image of Celticecis wellsi
image of Celticecis wellsi
image of Celticecis wellsi
image of Celticecis wellsi
image of Celticecis wellsi
image of Celticecis wellsi
image of Celticecis wellsi
image of Celticecis wellsi
image of Celticecis wellsi
image of Celticecis wellsi
image of Celticecis wellsi

The North American Gall Midges (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae) of Hackberries (Cannabaceae: Celtis spp.)

Celticecis wellsi (Wells)

Phytophaga wellsi

Hosts: Celtis laevigata, occidentalis

Gall.--On underside of leaf, in vein fork, usually perpendicular to leaf, often single but may occur in twos and threes; turbinate, widest beyond midlength, the apex flattened with diminutive apical tubercle in center; surface green turning brown, covered with variable but usually thick, abundant white pubescence; ca. 4 mm long, almost as wide as long; apparent on opposite side of leaf as slight, sometimes discolored convexity; in cross section, walls thickest on distal half, yellowish, woody, thinnest at center apex; larval chamber elongate-ovoid, as long as gall.

Remarks. — Wells (1916) wrote that the gall was covered with short pubescence, but the specimens we have are more or less completely covered with long hairs, some crinkly. We suspect that Wells's specimen lost the hair through handling. In fact. Wells did not always note or draw hairs or draw them to their fullest extent. As examples, he did not draw hairs on galls of C. supina (Plate 1, Fig. 11) although that gall usually has hairs, and he drew what looks like very short pubescence for galls of C. celtiphyllia (Plate 2, fig. 9) when in fact they are usually covered with longer hairs. Felt (1916) wrote that the galls of C. wellsi were sparsely clothed with a whitish, appressed pubescence. This description agrees better with the galls we have seen.

Affinities. — See discussion under C. pubescens. [C. pubescens and two others, C. pyriformis and C. wellsi, appear to be related. All three cause upright, columnar, woody, more or less hairy leaf galls that are attached to veins, Celticecis globosa may also be related to these three. The gall of C. globosa is also upright and woody but the larval chamber is ovoid instead of columnar and the larva itself is flatter and more deeply sulcate between segments.]

Distribution (Map 21). — This species is known from the midwestern U.S. and Georgia, on northern hackberry and sugarberry.

GA, IL, IA, KS, KY, OH

- Raymond J. Gagne, John C. Moser: (2013) The North American Gall Midges (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae) of Hackberries (Cannabaceae: Celtis spp.)©

Reference: https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/51467028#page/46/mode/1up


Further Information:
Pending...

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