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.
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Synonymy (3)
Name
Type
Notes
Cecidomyia salicis strobiliscus
scientific
Cecidomyia salicisstrobiliscus
scientific
Rhabdophaga strobiliscus
scientific
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Our ID Notes may contain important tips necessary for distinguishing this gall
from similar galls and/or important information about the taxonomic status of
this gall inducer.
Created Feb 4, 2026 1:47 PM UTC
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Last updated Feb 4, 2026 1:47 PM UTC
On the Insects, Coleopterous, Hymenopterous & Dipterous: Inhabiting the Galls of Certain Species of Willow. Pt 1st--Diptera
BD Walsh
(1864)
S. strobiliscus. n. sp.
On S. rostrata [bebbiana], a high northern willow not found near Rock Island. I only know this species from a single dried and mature specimen received from Mr. Bebb. and gathered in Winnebago Co., on the extreme northern border of Illinois. It has a diameter of .70 inch and differs from S. strobiloides O. S. 1st. In the tips of all the leaves on the outside of the gall, and not merely those towards the tip of the gall, being angulated not rounded. 2nd. In their external surface not being so strongly pubescent, especially the portion lying "to the weather." 3rd. In the leaves at the tip being almost linear or parallel-sided instead of oblanceolate, and proportionally about 1/2 longer so as to project in a kind of beak from the tip of the gall. 4th. In the tip of the gall being more open than is usual in S. strobiloides. 5th. In the veins even on the inside of the leaves being subobsolete. The cocoon, as far as can be judged from what remains of it, was similar to that of S. strobiloides, but unfortunately it contained, not the larva or pupa of the Cecidomyia, but a parasitic Callimome, which infests several of these Gall-gnats, in the imago state. Hence, and from the fact of there being catkins in flower on the twig on which it grew, we may know that the specimen was about 10 or 11 months old when gathered. As usual in mature S. strobiloides, the twig on which it grew had been killed immediately below it for the space of h an inch or so. Since it might possibly have been the case that it was this species, and not my S. strobiloides, which was named strobiloides by Baron Osten Sacken, as he merely describes his gall as being "in the shape of the cone of a pine and an inch or more long," I communicated to him the distinctive characters between the two species, and he has been kind enough to inform me that my S. strobiloides is identical with his. The specimens which he originally used were obtained in Northern Illinois, and he tells me that he afterwards gathered a single one in Massachusetts, so that we know of this one gall, at all events, that has a wide geographical range.