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Oak Apple Gall

Description:

Oak apple is the common name for a large, round, vaguely apple-like gall commonly found on many species of oak. Oak apples range in size from 2-5cm. Oak apples are caused by chemicals injected by the larva of certain kinds of gall wasp in the family Cynipidae.[1] The adult female wasp lays single eggs in developing leaf buds. The larvae feed on the gall tissue resulting from their secretions. Considerable confusion exists in the general 'literature' between the oak apple and the oak marble gall. The oak marble is frequently called the oak apple due to the superficial resemblance and the preponderance of the oak marble gall in the wild. Other galls found on oak trees include the Oak artichoke gall and the Acorn cup gall but these both have their own distinctive form. Some common oak-apple forming species are Biorhiza pallida gall wasp in Europe, Amphibolips confluenta in eastern North America[2], and Atrusca bella in western North America.[1] Oak apples may be brownish, yellowish, greenish, pinkish or reddish. Contents

Habitat:

Suburban Northeastern US

Notes:

[Original Note: Some sort of seed pod/fungi/thing? I am... not sure... But it's pretty amazing how it's basically suspended inside of a hollow orb.]

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6 Comments

ForestDragon
ForestDragon 10 years ago

Wonderful spotting! Please consider this for my new Arthropod Galls mission.
http://www.projectnoah.org/missions/1473...

MayraSpringmann
MayraSpringmann 11 years ago

Wow!!

Maria dB
Maria dB 11 years ago

cool spotting!

Brian Parsons
Brian Parsons 11 years ago

It is one of the Oak apple galls : http://www.fcps.edu/islandcreekes/ecolog...

CandiceB
CandiceB 11 years ago

Awesome!

Dan Doucette
Dan Doucette 11 years ago

Cool! I saw the same thing last year, though I never did get an exact ID.
http://www.projectnoah.org/spottings/661...

antaesthetic
Spotted by
antaesthetic

Lancaster, Pennsylvania, USA

Spotted on Aug 30, 2006
Submitted on May 11, 2012

Spotted for Mission

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