Gouty Oak Gall – Callirhtis quercuspunctata
Gouty Oak Gall (Callirhtis quercuspunctata)
Latin Name: Callirhtis quercuspunctata
Common Name: Gouty Oak Gall, Oak Knot Gall Wasp
Appearance:
- Callirhytis quercuspunctata, the gouty oak gall wasp, develops in the branches of pin, scarlet, red, and black oaks. These woody twig galls on oak are similar in appearance, but the horned oak gall has little horns protruding from the gall’s perimeter. Each of these horns produces one adult gall wasp.
- Individual twig galls mature into huge compound galls of more than 5 cm in diameter and up to 20 cm in length.
- Young galls are periderm tissue swellings that look like tumors. The bark of immature galls has a greenish-brown tint, with smooth surfaces save for projecting lenticels.
- Female body reddish-brown; abdomen considerably deeper than long, brownish-black on dorsum, oviposition protruding at a 45-degree angle; wings yellowish; approximately 2 mm long