Cynips (centricola) strians Kinsey
agamic form
Cynips centricola strians Kinsey, 1930, Ind. Univ. Studies 84-86:304, figs. 48, 256-257, 286 (omitting Eddyville record).
Cynips quercus-centricola strians Houard, 1934, Marcellia 28:47.
Cynips quercus-centricola Houard, 1935, Marcellia 28:122.
To the data given in Kinsey 1930, add:
RANGE.-Missouri: Springfield, 7 SE (R. Voris in Kinsey coll.). Norwood, 5 E. Sullivan, 1NE. Winona. Arkansas: Imboden, 5 SW (gall, B. C. Marshall in Kinsey coll.). Busch, 4 E. Sheridan, 4N. Prairie Grove, 4 E. Conway, 4 E. Hazen, 5 E. Jasper, 4 S. Oklahoma: Muldrow, 2W. Eldon, 4 E (gall only). Louisiana: Wyatt (gall only).
LIFE HISTORY..—Pupae: October 10. Adults: November 26. December 6, 10, 12, 13, 20, 22, 24. January 5, 30. February 2. Most of the emergence in mid-December.
The new records show the extensive range of this species through the Ozarks of Missouri, Arkansas, and Easternmost Oklahoma. The occurrence as far south as Sheridan, Arkansas (and possibly in Northern Louisiana) suggests that strians may be the same as Karsch's rubrae which came, presumably, from Texas; but it will be well to avoid mistaken synonymy by maintaining the two as distinct for the time being. If material from Eastern Texas, and a study of the type of rubrae (at the Berlin Museum) shows it to be the same as strians, it will be easy enough then to combine the nomenclature and data.
The spotted galls of strians are practically the same as those of centricola, differing perhaps in averaging smaller in diameter. Previously we considered that the well-developed median groove (found in most of the types) would always separate strians from centricola, but the more extended material which we now have from the Ozarks shows so much individual variation in this character that we must depend on the nearly uniform black color and the less triangulate tip of the second abscissa of the radius of strians as the best characters for distinguishing the insects.