Cerroneuroterus lanuginosus
|
Cerroneuroterus gyulaigaraiae
|
Cerroneuroterus apenninus
|
Type of gall
|
“spangle gall” (on the underside of the leaf) (Figs 46, 48) |
“spangle gall” (on the underside of the leaf) |
“cotton or woolly gall” (on the underside of the leaf) (Figs 54, 57) |
Shape
|
The gall is flat (Figs 48–50) |
The gall is flat |
The gall is rounded or drop- shaped (Figs 56, 58) |
Gall size
|
4-5 mm in diameter, 3-4 mm high |
2–4 mm in diameter, 1.5–2.0 mm high |
…at most 1-1.5 mm long |
Number of galls on the leaf
|
usually found in groups (up to 50) |
usually found in small groups (up to 5–6) |
usually found in big groups (80 to 200 small galls) |
Upper side of the leaf lamina
|
The gall does not erupt through the upper surface of the leaf, but forms a small pale mark on the upper surface indicating a gall beneath (
Melika, 2006b
). The numerous galls collected on
Q. suber
and
Q. cerris
in our collections do not have any marks in correspondence on the upper surface of the leaves (Fig. 47).
|
The gall does not erupt through the upper surface of the leaf, but forms a small pale mark on the upper surface indicating a gall beneath. |
Appearing even slightly from the side of the upper page in the manner of minute brown callosity, a little wrinkled, with a diameter of just over 0.5 mm (Fig. 55). |
Tissues surrounding
|
Thick and spongy-like (Figs |
Thick and spongy-like. |
Very thin and not-spongy |
the larval chambers mature galls
|
in
|
51–52). |
(Fig. 58). |
Wall of the chambers
|
larval
|
In the centre of the spongy tissue there is a hard-walled central chamber, slightly flattened; small spaces surround the chamber laterally (Figs 51– 52). |
In the centre of the spongy tissue there is a hard-walled central larval chamber, which is not surrounded by air chambers, parenchima around the central larval chamber thick and hard. |
In mature galls the wall of the larval chambers is very thin with a suberous fragile consistency (Fig. 58). |
Length of hair
|
Length of hair less than 1.5 times the height of gall (Figs 48, 50–51). |
Short pale silk. |
Length of hair more than two times the height of gall (Fig. 56). |
Histological feature of hairs
|
Unicellular cylindrical hairs (Fig. 53) |
Unknown |
Cylindrical multicellular with a larger diameter near the septa and constituted by cell segments of unequal thickness (Figs 59, 60). |
References
|
Melika, 2006b
|
Melika, 2006a
|
Cerasa
et al.
(present paper)
|