Cynips teres variety clavuloides, new name
agamic form
Dryophanta clavula
Diplolepis clavula
GALLS. — Slender, long, up to 8.0 mm. in length, the stalk nearly twice the length of the swollen portion of the gall, the swollen portion slender to broad spindle-shaped, drawn out into a slender point apically; on leaves of Quercus lobata. Figures 142-143.
RANGE. — California: Yorkville and Clear Lake (galls, Leach in Kinsey coll.). Kelseyville (P. Schulthess in Kinsey coll.). Sonoma and Napa Counties (types; Koebele coll.). Napa (galls, Leach in Kinsey coll.; also J. C. Bradley acc. Weld 1926). Sacramento (in Mus. Comp. Zook). Chico, Calistoga, Stockton, Kaweah, and Levee (galls, acc. Weld 1926). Concord (C. T. Dobbs in Kinsey coll.). Mt. Diablo (Leach in Kinsey coll.). Palo Alto (Wiltz in Stanf. Univ.). Sierra foothills east of Dinuba, and St. Johns River near Klink (L. H. Powell in Kinsey coll.). Confined perhaps to a narrow area rimming the Central Valleys of California, probably limited to Q. lobata. Figure 28.
This distinctive gall is never abundant, but it is usually included in collections made in the autumn on the Valley white oak of the foothills rimming the Central Valleys of California. The young galls begin development in August (acc. Weld), and are fully grown by the middle of September (September 12 in 1921 at Concord). Galls collected as early as October 4 (in 1925 at Kelseyville) had very large larvae in them. Most of the insects 1 have bred have emerged during the first half of January, but the Kelseyville material emerged between January 29 and February 5, 1926. McCracken and Egbert record January emergence for indoor breeding.
All of the material I have examined has come from Q. lobata , and if this or a related variety ever occurs on Q. Douglasii it would appear to be rare. In the original description Beutenmiiller’s host record ran “a species of white oak (prob- ably Quercus douglasi).” He corrected this to “Quercus lobata ” in his subsequent treatment of the genus Dryophanta. I do not know the basis of the McCracken and Egbert record for Q. Douglasii.
While we may yet find this variety in the Central Valley proper, it is noteworthy that up to date the only records are from the foothills rimming the Valleys from their northern to their southern limits, a peculiarly outlined area that has other insects and plants confined to it.
The figure in Kellogg’s American Insects, and galls in my collection taken east of Dinuba, show larger, more swollen apices than any of the galls from other parts of California. The insects from the Dinuba material similarly average larger.
Upon transferring this insect to the genus Cynips , Beutenmuller’s name of clavula, being preoccupied, gives way to teres for the species and a new name for the variety.
There are galls of this species in the Ashmead collection at the National Museum labelled types of Andricus claviger Ashmead. This is a confusion of material, for the holotype insect of claviger represents a Florida species of an entirely different genus.