Plagiotrochus quercusilicis ( Fabricius, 1798 )

Shachar, Einat, Melika, George, Inbar, Moshe & Dorchin, Netta, 2018, The oak gall wasps of Israel (Hymenoptera, Cynipidae, Cynipini) - diversity, distribution and life history, Zootaxa 4521 (4), pp. 451-498 : 477

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4521.4.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A4FD6137-25B0-43D5-845B-B4FDF4E9F5D7

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5949973

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/AC1F87FE-FFFE-FF9C-FF61-FD12FB44B21D

treatment provided by

Plazi (2019-03-26 18:17:11, last updated 2024-11-29 10:27:24)

scientific name

Plagiotrochus quercusilicis ( Fabricius, 1798 )
status

 

Plagiotrochus quercusilicis ( Fabricius, 1798)

Host plants. Israel: Q. calliprinos . Elsewhere: Q. ilex and Q. coccifera .

Life history. Known only from the leaf galls of the sexual generation, which are multi-chambered, fleshy, rigid, ovoid, up to 8 mm in diameter, occupying most of the leaf ( Fig. 74 View FIGURES 71–74 ). The galls are green when young, red when mature, with smooth and shiny surface.

Phenology. Galls begin to develop in March and adults emerge from them in April-May.

Distribution. Israel: Odem Forest, Mt. Meron, Pa’ar cave, Kfar Hahoresh, Tiv’on, Mt. Carmel, Zur Hadassa. Elsewhere: This is the most common and widespread species in the genus Plagiotrochus , with a circummediterranean distribution.

Comments. When young, the galls resemble those of Plagiotrochus australis Mayr on Q. ilex in the Western Mediterranean Region but P. australis galls are single-chambered whereas those of P. quercusilicis are multichambered. Sternlicht (1968b) referred to galls of this species as belonging to the sexual generation of Plagiotrichus kiefferianus Tavares, a species that has been synonymized under P. gallaeramulorum Boyer de Fonscolombe ( Pujade-Villar 2005) . The possibility that P. quercusilicis and P. gallaeramulorum are synonymous was first suggested by Tavares (1926) and later by Nieves-Aldrey (2001) but without clear evidence.

Fabricius, J. C. (1798) Supplementum Entomologiae Systematicae. Profit & Storch, Copenhagen, 572 pp.

Nieves-Aldrey, J. L. (2001) Hymenoptera, Cynipidae. In: Ramos, M. A. (Eds.), Fauna Iberica. Fol. 16. Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales, CSIC, Madrid, pp. 1 - 636.

Pujade-Villar, J. (2005) Plagiotrochus gallaeramulorum (Boyer de Fonscolombe, 1832) n. comb. is a valid species (Hymenoptera: Cynipidae). Boletin de la Asociacion Espanola de Entomologia, 29, 137 - 138.

Sternlicht, M. (1968 b) The oak galls of Israel (Quercus calliprinos Webb, and Quercus ithaburensis Decne.). Israel Journal of Entomology, 3, 17 - 57.

Tavares, J. da S. (1926) Os Cynipides da Peninsula Iberica. Broteria, Serie Zoologica, 23, 16 - 78.

Gallery Image

FIGURES 71–74. Galls on various Quercus species. 71. Andricus miriami, sexual generation on Quercus libani; 72. Same, old gall; 73. Plagiotrochus razeti, asexual generation on Quercus calliprinos; 74. Plagiotrochus quercusilicis, sexual generation on Quercus calliprinos.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Cynipidae

Genus

Plagiotrochus