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
•
Last updated Feb 4, 2026 1:47 PM UTC
A summers study of hickory galls, with descriptions of supposed new insects bred therefrom
Henry Shimer
(1868)
Dactylosphaera caryae-magnum, n. sp.?
Gall No. 6
?Pemphigus caryae-caulis [this synonymy is not valid]
Hosts: Carya amara [cordiformis]
Subglobular galls, varying in size from a quarter of an inch to one inch in diameter, the average being about half an inch, situate on leaf or its stems or mid-ribs; color greenish-white, sometimes with a blush of red on one side. The opening is beneath, in the shape of a small, elongate slit, which at length cracks open, like a chestnut burr, in three or four long slits running up the sides; after this the gall soon turns black and dries away. The cavity within is capacious, the walls being about 1/8 in thickness.
On June 17th I observed thousands of those galls and took home a large botanical box full for study. They were so numerous as to injure the growth of the trees. Those galls that had not yet began to open, and within which no parasites had gained access, were so thickly studded with young lice, that their abdomens pointed directly inward towards the centre, resembling the crystals in a geode, being wedged in as densely as mosaic work, while the whole central cavity was crowded with winged imagos; the former held on with great tenacity, while the latter were easily shaken out. In one gall I counted as many as one thousand inhabitants. At this time (June 17th) many of the galls had cracked open and the winged imagos were escaping in immense numbers. No eggs were found. The larvae were pale greenish-yellow. On June 25th the galls were all dry, black and deserted.