Pseudoneuroterus macropterus
Oak gall wasp Pseudoneuroterus macropterus
Description
The gall develops at or just behind the tip of 1-2 year old shoots. A multilocular, cigar-shaped swelling, commonly 20-50 mm in length and up to 15 mm in diameter. The gall contains many elliptical chambers oriented as a layer perpendicular to the outer wall. Each larval chamber is up to 2 mm long. The galls are formed in the 2nd part of the summer, adults emerge in August/September or year later after a prolonged diapause. The affected shoot may swell to twice its original thickness as the gall develops, and may cause have withering or stunting of the shoot. Heavy infestation may severely stunts single young trees, but the influence is regularly not significant on stand scale. Oak forests, mainly young stands.
Symptom
A multilocular, cigar-shaped swelling, commonly 20-50 mm in length and up to 15 mm in diameter. The gall contains many elliptical chambers oriented as a layer perpendicular to the outer wall.
Tree Species: Oak
Part of a plant- attacked: Branch
Pest significance: Less harmful
Pest Category: Insects
Present in EU: Yes
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