Biology:Harmandiola tremulae

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Short description: Species of insect

Harmandiola tremulae
Harmandia tremulae 01.JPG
H. tremulae galls.
Scientific classification edit
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Diptera
Superfamily: Sciaroidea
Family: Cecidomyiidae
Genus: Harmandiola
Species:
H. tremulae
Binomial name
Harmandiola tremulae
(Winnertz, 1853)
Synonyms
  • Harmandia tremulae Cecidomyia tremulae
  • Winnertz, 1853 Rübsaamen, 1892
  • (Winnertz, 1853) Harmandiola loewii
  • Harmandia loewi (Rübsaamen, 1892)
  • Diplosis loewii (Rübsaamen, 1892)

Harmandiola tremulae, the aspen leaf gall midge, is a species of gall midges in the family Cecidomyiidae.[1]

Description

"The larvae live in galls on the leaves of Populus tremula and two different forms can be found. One is the size of a pea, green, red, or green and red, hard, with a slightly wrinkled surface, and is found on the leaf surface or leaf veins in clusters. The second form is much smaller, usually yellowish but can also be red or green. The substance is usually looser, spongy or pithy with a small single-chambered larval cavity. The gall is usually not perfectly round, as they are clustered close together on the leaf surface, they become angular due to squeezing each other. Both types of galls open on the underside of the leaf, rarely on the side, mature in August and September, and release the larvae into the ground, where they develop either in the autumn or the following spring. Regarding the two following galls, I cannot agree with Winnertz. He considers them to be varieties of the previous one, but in my experience, they must be considered as independent forms." Translated from 'Overview of the gall formations that occur in Tilia, Salix, Populus, Artemisia, along with comments on some other galls' , by Dr. F. Rudow.[2]

References

Wikidata ☰ Q13625725 entry