Not certain this is the same thing as the gallformers code I added but couldn't find what else it could be..last couple pictures just to show the host plant (I know, not great pics)
These emerged today at some point, September 17th, I just remembered to check them for today very late . But I have been checking daily since collected .. collection September 12th
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/241307984
my set up is definitely not ideal . I had to collect them in the rain, and put them on paper towels in a bucket. I'm not sure if they vacated early due to deterioration of flowers . One bunch is kind of moldy. The other bunch is drying out. They are crawling around about 20 of them ..
The original flowers and discussion https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/240663407
@megachile @calconey what do you think? Gall Week September 2024
On Lythrum salicaria
Only species on bladmineerds for the host.
Petanovic 99 described it as "mites are causing erinea and leaf edge rollings", which I guess it's a match ...
I can / will look for it again and get better pictures if needed
Tentative ID. Quercus marilandica. Immature acorn gall?
Q. palustris. Two galls. Sending to Forbes lab.
Longwood Acc # L-0660*C
Big! The size of peanuts
Gall on coastal hedgenettle (Stachys chamissonis)
Swollen bud galls? Quercus rubra. Sending three galls to Forbes lab. Last 3 pics are gall dissected by Guerin and bright orange larvae inside.
iNat suggests host is Quercus minima
Seen on a short hike to visit an area listed as exemplary wet prairie by FNAI (location listed on their website) in the Three Lakes WMA. I spent my Saturday and Sunday at Three Lakes to hike and blacklight.
All of my observations from these two days in Osceola County:
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations?d1=2024-08-31&d2=2024-09-01&order=asc&order_by=observed_on&place_id=938&user_id=joemdo
Blacklighting observations:
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations?d1=2024-08-31&d2=2024-09-01&order=asc&order_by=observed_on&place_id=938&project_id=blacklighting-florida&user_id=joemdo
wpt 200; just guessing on the family; bunch gall on Oclemena acuminata
On a grass sp. Working on host ID, possibly Homaluroides ingratus with host likely M. frondosa (host observation https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/237732286)
Impatiens capensis - globular stem gall with emergence holes and pupal exuvia
Coreopsis tripteris
Reminds me a bit of Pilodiplosis galls on Helianthus sp.
Witches broom or w/e on Robinia pseudoacacia
galls on Sagittaria leaf.
Rust? Mites?
S. integrifolium - tiny little pimple close to the leaf margin, single larva contained within. Preserved in 95% etOH and en route to @louisnastasi
On laurel greenbrier. Chicot State Park. South end campground area
On Notholithocarpus.
On Carya tomentosa
First photo: top of leaf on left, bottom of leaf on right.
Second photo: in the gall on the right side, I’ve scraped away the top and you can see a tiny glistening dot that is the larva. There is viscous purple stuff that may be a deterrent of some kind.
This is a picture of some galls on a Clematis terniflora at Terrapin Nature Park on Kent Island in Queen Anne's County, Maryland.
Gall on bud or stem of rose (Rosa sp.)
I had to look for this fungus while I was here. The galls are tiny, but I found them!
This seems to be an undescribed species of Neolasioptera, causing stem swelling on this large figwort (Scrophularia species). Currently there are no images on the Gallformers website for it, so if this looks correct then feel free to use one or all of them.
I split the find, please also compare to Aprostocetus elongatus.
Lucky catch: The observation shows the ovipositor of Aprostocetus elongatus penetrating the beech gall.
The Marianist Nature Preserve is maintained by the Marianist Environmental Education Center (MEEC) at Mount St. John. This was my first visit, and I hiked a short loop of the trail that took me from an open wildflower meadow at the Sacred Embrace Earthwork, through oak/hickory/dogwood woods to the Woodland Fen, and then along a little side loop trail through the Moist Woods and overlooking the Brother Don Geiger Tall Grass Prairie.
These wonderfully fluffy galls were growing on a grapevine that was ambling through the wildflowers in the little meadow at the Sacred Embrace Earthwork. I've never seen any like these before, and this was the only batch of them I saw there.
Galls with insect larvae of variable size on buds and flowers of Fendler's Meadow-rue.
Betula lenta
Quercus aliena. Tree obs at https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/223251060
On Eurybia divaricata. A platygastrid emerged in June 2024.
Terminal tip galls on Eupatorium serotinum. Visible in 3rd photo. Leaf mines in 3rd photo posted separately. Palmetto Island State Park
Bud galls on rabbitbrush (Ericameria nauseosa, see https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/222388810) in badlands.
A few florets in the bloom of a Sambucus cerulea had slightly swollen ovaries beneath them. I opened one from one shrub and one from a few yards away.
I was expecting Elderberry Gall Midge (Schizomyia umbellicola), which I have twice found in the county, one of them < 10 miles away. The midge produces much more swollen ovaries--particularly the June 27 one, which had swollen, very round galls. The May 11 one was shaped more like a vase.
Is this unknown larva a gall inducer? IDK. Maybe.
On a Tilia americana tree (219894458) that I was revisiting.
I can't find a match for this on gallformers.org
iNat thinks Cecidomyiinae. Idk.
On Tilia americana (219894458), eating Eriophyes tiliae galls (219894464).
This was wild. I'm used to seeing leaves eaten around the galls, avoiding them. But this cat was munching on a gall when I saw it. As I tried to get pix, it retreated under some webbing. I waited and came back to find that it had started on a fresh gall. Other galls showed damage as well.
I searched the plant and found another such caterpillar. It too was nestled under webbing and between galls, although I couldn't see feeding damage to the galls or the leaf there.
Net, I'm uncertain whether the caterpillar is preying on the gall-making organisms or simply eating the galls.
Clustered on stems of Coreopsis tripteris. Vicinity of seepage area. Vicinity of FS road 249, KNF, Woodworth area
Gallformers site says unnamed gall on Coreopsis stems.
Last 2 photos show the same plant with normal flower and seed heads. Plant, Silphium gracile, posted separately. Town of Washington, my yard.
On Common Hackberry (214525706).
No clue on this one. They were popping out of the fruit!
There were similar galls on leaves and stems. But after checking gallformers.org I didn't see a good match for galls on fruit.
Stuck it in Celticecis for lack of any other ideas.