Melikaiella ostensackeni
(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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Location: upper leaf, lower leaf, between leaf veins
Form:
Cells: monothalamous
Possible Range:
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
Cynips modesta
scientific
Callirhytis modesta
scientific
partial synonym; see Pujade-Villar in Further Info
Cynips quercusmodesta
scientific
partial synonym; see Pujade-Villar in Further Info
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
•
Last updated Feb 4, 2026 1:47 PM UTC
Notes on cynipid wasps, with descriptions of new North American species
LH Weld
(1922)
Callirhytis modesta (Osten Sacken).
Cynips modesta Osten Sacken, Proc. Ent. Soc. Phila., vol. 1, 1861, pp 65-6.
Cynips papula Bassett, Canad. Ent., vol. 13, 1881, p 107.
C. modesta was described from three females from an irregular hard protuberance on both sides of leaf of red oak, the flies emerging in late June at Washington DC. In the Museum of Comparative Zoology the type flies are gone from the pins, and the type gall looks like a fragment of the gall of papula Bassett, whose types the writer has seen at Philadelphia.
C papula was described from a few females from a similar gall on red and black oak, the flies beginning to emerge July 12 in Connectict. The only material of the adults of papula available for comparative study has been a fly reared by the writer from the characteristic gall on the leaves of red oak at Medina, New York (the gall contained pupae on July 2), and flies determined by Gillette from Iowa. The writer has seen the old galls at Rosslyn, VA, and at Hugo, OK, and taken the fresh galls many times in the Chicago area, where they were very common in 1917 and contained pupae on July 16. Thus the structure of the gall, the host oak, and the known facts of the biology correspond closely, for one would expect the flies to emerge two weeks earlier at Washington, and it seems propable that modesta and papula are but two names for one species.