Euura salicisdesmodioides

Family: Tenthredinidae | Genus: Euura
Detachable: integral
Color: red, yellow, green
Texture:
Abundance:
Shape:
Season: Spring, Summer
Related:
Alignment: integral
Walls:
Location: upper leaf, lower leaf, on leaf veins, between leaf veins
Form:
Cells:
Possible Range:i
Common Name(s):
Synonymy:
Pending...
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image of Euura salicisdesmodioides
image of Euura salicisdesmodioides
image of Euura salicisdesmodioides
image of Euura salicisdesmodioides
image of Euura salicisdesmodioides
image of Euura salicisdesmodioides
image of Euura salicisdesmodioides
image of Euura salicisdesmodioides
image of Euura salicisdesmodioides
image of Euura salicisdesmodioides
image of Euura salicisdesmodioides
image of Euura salicisdesmodioides
image of Euura salicisdesmodioides
image of Euura salicisdesmodioides
image of Euura salicisdesmodioides
image of Euura salicisdesmodioides
image of Euura salicisdesmodioides
image of Euura salicisdesmodioides
image of Euura salicisdesmodioides
image of Euura salicisdesmodioides
image of Euura salicisdesmodioides

On the Insects, Coleopterous, Hymenopterous & Dipterous: Inhabiting the Galls of Certain Species of Willow. Pt 2nd and last

Nesmatus salicis desmodioides, n. sp.

On Salix humilis

A smooth, flattish, fleshy, sessile, yellowish-green, monothalamous gall of a semicircular outline, the chord of the semicircle adjoining the midrib of a leaf; its general shape like the seed of a Desmodium, or like the so-called "quarter" of an orange, the thin inside edge of the "quarter" closely hugging the midrib of the leaf, and the robust outer surface not biangulated but rounded off. No rosy cheek. The volume of the gall is generally about equally divided between the upper and lower sides of the leaf, but sometimes the lower portion is rather the larger. Usually there is but a single gall on a single leaf, but occasionally there are two of them either on the same side or on opposite sides of the midrib. One leaf was noticed with as many as three of these galls upon it. Length .23 — .50 inch; 131 specimens. The above is the appearance of the mature gall July 30; but on May 17 it is already nearly full-sized, and then many of them have a rosy cheek like the normal S.pomum. Abundant and not local. Distinct from S. pomum by its very different shape, and by its never having any rosy cheek when mature, and by the very distinct species of willow on which it occurs.

- BD Walsh: (1866) On the Insects, Coleopterous, Hymenopterous & Dipterous: Inhabiting the Galls of Certain Species of Willow. Pt 2nd and last©

Reference: https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/24078#page/268/mode/1up


Further Information:
Pending...

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