Andricus ribes, new species
GALL. — Spherical, berry-like, very succulent, green and more or less translucent when fresh, bright red when very young; the surface pebbled, with a few, small, projecting points. Shrivelling greatly upon drying, becoming blackened, 4.-6. mm. in diameter; when drying upon the twig, the galls become rather obconical in shape, remaining lighter in color. Monothalamous, the cavity filling the whole gall, the wall of tissue moderately thin, thinnest furthest from the point of attachment. Attached by only a slight point to twigs (bud galls) of Quercus douglasii.
RANGE.— California: Oroville, Three Rivers. Some of the galls at Oroville contained pupae on April 1, while an equal number showed adults or exit holes thru which adults had already emerged. The whole life of this generation must be a month or so, with an alternate, probably agamic generation in the rest of the year. Of 40 adults I have, 14 are males. The species is not entirely unlike Dryophanta pulchella Beutenmuller, of which the male and gall are unknown, but the two species are distinct enough.
”- Alfred Charles Kinsey: (1922) Studies of some new and described Cynipidae (Hymenoptera)©
Reference: https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/45387508#page/104/mode/1up