Diastrophus kincaidii

Family: Cynipidae | Genus: Diastrophus
Detachable: integral
Color: brown, red, green
Texture: hairless
Abundance:
Shape: globular
Season: Summer, Spring
Related:
Alignment: integral
Walls: thick
Location: stem
Form: abrupt swelling
Cells: polythalamous
Possible Range:i
Common Name(s):
Synonymy:
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image of Diastrophus kincaidii
image of Diastrophus kincaidii
image of Diastrophus kincaidii
image of Diastrophus kincaidii
image of Diastrophus kincaidii
image of Diastrophus kincaidii
image of Diastrophus kincaidii
image of Diastrophus kincaidii
image of Diastrophus kincaidii
image of Diastrophus kincaidii
image of Diastrophus kincaidii
image of Diastrophus kincaidii
image of Diastrophus kincaidii
image of Diastrophus kincaidii
image of Diastrophus kincaidii

Field Guide to the Herb and Bramble Gall Wasps of North America

Diastrophus kincaidii
Thimbleberry gall wasp

Host: Thimbleberry (Rubus parviflorus).

Gall location: On the stem.

Description: Large, irregular, multiple-chambered swellings, up to 6 centimeters in length and 2 centimeters in diameter. Sometimes rounded but often club-shaped, spindle-shaped, vaguely gnarled and twisted, or otherwise deformed. Generally smooth and covered with spots of rough, bark-like tissue. Greenish to reddish and fleshy when fresh to brown when old and dry.

Range: This gall occurs in two distinct, isolated populations: one in Western North America from northern British Columbia south to most of California and east to Montana, and another in the Great Lakes region in Ontario, Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Michigan. It has been theorized that the two distinct populations are the result of glaciation.

A second species, currently known as Diastrophus austrior, has often been split off from this species based on specimens collected in California. The status of this second species is uncertain but will hopefully be resolved in the near future. Galls on this host plant are especially easy to distinguish, as thimbleberry has no thorns.

- Louis Nastasi, Charles Davis: (2022) Field Guide to the Herb and Bramble Gall Wasps of North America©


Further Information:
Pending...

See Also:
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