Journal article
The Arthropod Associates of 155 North American Cynipid Oak Galls
Zoological studies, Vol.61, p.e57
2022
DOI: 10.6620/ZS.2022.61-57
PMCID: PMC9810845
PMID: 36644628
Abstract
The identities of most arthropod associates of cynipid-induced oak galls in the western Palearctic are generally known. However, a comprehensive accounting of associates has been performed for only a small number of the galls induced by the estimated 700 species of cynipid gall wasps in the Nearctic. This gap in knowledge stymies many potential studies of diversity, coevolution, and community ecology, for which oak gall systems are otherwise ideal models. We report rearing records of insects and other arthropods from more than 527,306 individual galls representing 201 different oak gall types collected from 32 oak tree species in North America. Of the 201 gall types collected, 155 produced one or more arthropods. A total of 151,075 arthropods were found in association with these 155 gall types, and of these 61,044 (40.4%) were gall wasps while 90,031 (59.6%) were other arthropods. We identified all arthropods to superfamily, family, or, where possible, to genus. We provide raw numbers and summaries of collections, alongside notes on natural history, ecology, and previously published associations for each taxon. For eight common gall-associated genera (
,
,
,
,
,
,
, and
), we also connect rearing records to gall wasp phylogeny, geography, and ecology -including host tree and gall location (host organ), and their co-occurrence with other insect genera. Though the diversity of gall wasps and the large size of these communities is such that many Nearctic oak gall-associated insects still remain undescribed, this large collection and identification effort should facilitate the testing of new and varied ecological and evolutionary hypotheses in Nearctic oak galls.
Details
- Title: Subtitle
- The Arthropod Associates of 155 North American Cynipid Oak Galls
- Creators
- Anna K G Ward - University of IowaRobert W Busbee - Texas State UniversityRachel A Chen - Binghamton UniversityCharles K Davis - Rice UniversityAmanda L Driscoe - Texas State UniversityScott P Egan - Rice UniversityBailey A R Goldberg - University of IowaGlen Ray Hood - Wayne State UniversityDylan G Jones - Binghamton UniversityAdam J Kranz - Gallformers.org. E-mail: adamjameskranz@gmail.com (Kranz).Shannon A Meadely-Dunphy - McGill UniversityAlyson K Milks - Binghamton UniversityJames R Ott - Texas State UniversityKirsten M Prior - Binghamton UniversitySofia I Sheikh - University of IowaShih-An Shzu - Rice UniversityKelly L Weinersmith - Rice UniversityLinyi Zhang - Rice UniversityY Miles Zhang - National Museum of Natural HistoryAndrew A Forbes - University of Iowa
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Publication Details
- Zoological studies, Vol.61, p.e57
- DOI
- 10.6620/ZS.2022.61-57
- PMID
- 36644628
- PMCID
- PMC9810845
- ISSN
- 1021-5506
- eISSN
- 1810-522X
- Language
- English
- Date published
- 2022
- Academic Unit
- Biology; University College Courses
- Record Identifier
- 9984360033802771
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