Diplolepis radicum
GALL. — A large, massive, pithy root gall. Polythalamous, larger galls with a hundred or more larval cells. Very irregular in shape, but generally rounded, globular, depressed at the points of attachment, irregularly folded, gnarled, sometimes as an unopened bud; variable in size, up to 105. mm. in length by 70. mm. in diameter; reddish brown, darkening with age. Internally soft, rather pithy, with only a small amount of woody fiber; the larval cells large, nearly round, often 4. mm. in diameter, with a smooth but hardly distinct, inseparable lining. On stems and roots, under ground, or under debris close to the ground; sessile or nearly so, laterally or terminally, on roses.
RANGE. — Canada and Maine to North Carolina and Washington, Probably everywhere in North America where roses occur. The insects emerge rather late in the spring, in April or May or later, depending on the development of the season. Immature galls may be found in July or August. The species is bisexual, with the sexes about equal in numbers, and probably takes only a single year to mature, without an alternation of generations. The number of parasites bred is not great, altho they do occur. W. M. Davis (1908) records finding galls broken into by mice.
Diplolepis radicum variety radicum (Osten Sacken)
GALL. — Does not differ particularly from the galls of other varieties; averaging smaller.
RANGE.— D.C.: Washington (Osten Sacken). North Carolina (Beutenmuller) . Pennsylvania? (Beutenmuller) . New Jersey: Ft. Lee (Beutenmuller) . New York: Staten Island (Beutenmuller); Nyack (Zabriskie in Amer. Mus.).
Diplolepis radicum variety johnsoni, new variety
GALL. — Does not differ particularly from the galls of other varieties, averaging smaller.
RANGE. — Massachusetts : Gloucester. Not improbably occurs thruout more northern New England.
Probably no two localities in the United States have been more thoroly collected for Cynipidae than eastern Massachusetts and the neighborhood of New York City. It is no credit to the taxonomy we have been doing to have ignored the evident differences between material from the two regions. No two adjacent varieties of this species are more distinct than radicum and johnsoni. I have not yet worked out the extent of the cynipid fauna of eastern Massachusetts; it is probably the same as the fauna of most of more northern New England; variety radicum is very probably confined to the remnants of the old Atlantic Coastal Plain.
[Kinsey goes on to describe three more varieties, one of which is listed separately as Diplolepis utahensis]