Neuroterus floricola
(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
The Gall Wasp Genus Neuroterus
Alfred Kinsey
(1923)
Neuroterus (Diplobius) floricola bisexual form
Hosts: Quercus douglasii
GALL. — A small, egg-shaped capsule in the ament. Monothalamous, rarely two or three more or less fused. A modified anther, each capsule egg-shaped, almost smooth, microscopically coriaceous, drying brownish yellow, averaging 1.5 by 0.7 mm.; thin-walled, entirely hollow. Scattered in the aments of Quercus Douglasii (fig. 23).
RANGE. — California: Three Rivers. Probably occurs thruout the range of Quercus Douglasii.
This gall appears very early in the spring, the adults probably emerging a short time after the buds open on the oak. The species probably has an alternate, agamic generation. It is so closely related to the other species of the sub- genus Diplobius that, as with them, the alternate should be a leaf vein or petiole swelling. As pointed out in the introduction to this paper, the monothalamous, precisely formed anther gall is not as specialized as it looks, but is the inevitable result of a simple proliferation of anther material.