Caryomyia hirtidolium

Family: Cecidomyiidae | Genus: Caryomyia
Detachable: detachable
Color: brown, green, tan
Texture: areola, hairy
Abundance: occasional
Shape: globular
Season: Summer
Related:
Alignment: erect
Walls: thin
Location: lower leaf, between leaf veins
Form:
Cells:
Possible Range:i
Common Name(s):
Synonymy:
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image of Caryomyia hirtidolium
image of Caryomyia hirtidolium
image of Caryomyia hirtidolium
image of Caryomyia hirtidolium
image of Caryomyia hirtidolium
image of Caryomyia hirtidolium

The Gall Midges (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae) of Hickories (Juglandaceae: Carya)

Caryomyia hirtidolium Gagne, new species

Hosts: Carya tomentosa, glabra, ovata

Gall (Figs. 49-50): Occasional, on Eucarya hickories; on lower leaf surface, between veins; 3.0-3.9 mm in height, spheroidal, slightly longer than wide, base broadly rounded to truncate in profile, apex with small central nipple surrounded by extensive areola that with pressure can separate from gall; covered with long, silvery brown to brown hair obscuring surface, the hair denser and longer, rosette-like, on areola; base with wide, deep, circular indentation; wall firm, brittle, almost uniformly thin, larval chamber glabrous, with longitudinal ridges. For notes on galls of related species, see under C. cilidolium.

Affinities. — See under C. cilidolium. [C cilidolium: Caryomyia cilidolium, C. hirtidolium, C. tuberidolium, and C. viscidolium form similarly shaped, spheroidal, thin walled galls (Figs. 43-52). At their apex is a large, circular areola surrounding a small central nipple. With a little pressure the circular apex can be broken off as a unit from the rest of the gall and forms the exit from which pupae emerge in spring. Galls of C. cilidolium occur only on bitternut of the Apocarya section of Carya, usually on the lower surface, and are covered with sparse, fine, short hairs. The other three species of this group occur on the Eucarya section. Galls of C. hirtidolium are hairy, much more so than those of C. cilidolium, so that the long hair obscures the gall surface. Galls of C. tuberidolium and C. viscidolium are both sticky, the former very much so and also bumpy and more spherical, the latter merely slightly resinous and smooth. A major difference between these two last species is that C. tuberidolium occurs on the underside of the leaf (except for one example known to me) while C. viscidolium occurs on the upperside. This difference indicates a different egg-laying strategy by the female. The pupal stages are known for all except C. hirtidolium, both sexes for C. cilidolium and C. viscidolium, and the female for C. tuberidolium.]

Range: AL, AR, CT, GA, MD, OK, SC, VA, DC

- Raymond J. Gagne: (2008) The Gall Midges (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae) of Hickories (Juglandaceae: Carya)©

Reference: https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/38636615#page/49/mode/1up


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