Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Pine Cone Willow Gall

While out walking today, I chose an area in Moreau Lake State Park I'd never explored before, and I came across a willow shrub whose every branch was tipped with what looked like a grey-green pine cone. "Whoa!" I said, "willows don't have cones! Must be some kind of gall." When I got home I googled "willow galls" and right away found a match. This is a Pine Cone Willow Gall, caused by a gall midge, Rhobdophaga strobiloides.

As tiny as its name is long, this midge lays its eggs in the spring at the tips of willow branches. The eggs and their resultant larvae release a chemical that causes the willow leaves to form cone-like structures that encase the larvae and protect them over the winter. At some point, the larvae pupate, and adult midges emerge the following spring. Without mouthparts to chew its way out, the midge simply pushes aside the overlapping scales of the structure as it emerges. If some other insect hasn't parasitized it first, that is. This gall is apparently famous for harboring many other insects besides the midge that produced it in the first place.

I'd heard about galls like this but had never seen one. Surprises await everywhere.

I'm now awaiting an answer from BugGuide.net regarding the identity of this little beetle that looks like it was spattered with black paint. It was crawling on one of the half-eaten leaves of the gall-infested willow. I love its reddish legs and antennae that look like strings of tiny beads.

Update: Folks at BugGuide.net have suggested that this is probably in the genus Calligrapha, possibly Calligrapha multipunctata or Common Willow Calligrapha. The name certainly fits.

5 comments:

Louise said...

I've never seen that, and there are tons of willows around here. I'll have to look a little closer.

Ellen Rathbone said...

I think we all have the same reaction the first time we see a pine cone willow gall. Aren't they beautiful, though?

suep said...

lots of willow galls along Meadowbrook - you must visit sometime, in dry weather it's also grasshopper heaven in the meadow loop !
very cool beetle, it would be fun to see two of them and compare designs...

Anonymous said...

It is a Calligrapha Leaf Beetle. Very nice!

Anonymous said...

It is a Calligrapha Leaf Beetle. Very nice!