Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-v9fdk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-14T22:24:00.900Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

THE PLUM-TWIG GALL-MITE: Phytoptus phlœocoptes, Nalepa

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 May 2012

M. V. Slingerland
Affiliation:
Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y.

Extract

In January, 1895, I received from a fruit grower at Industry, Pa., several plum-twigs which were badly infested with what was to me a new pest. Two of these twigs are shown, natural size, on the accompanying plate. It will be seen that a ring of small, sub-spherical excrescences encircles the base of each bud and also the bases of two short shoots. The correspondent wrote that he had 400 trees badly infested, and a majority of the plum trees in his neighborhood were affected. The Damsons seem especially subject to attack, but all varieties suffer more or less.

The excrescences were then of a dark brown colour, with a slight reddish tinge. Usually a slit-like opening could be distinguished on the surface. Upon carefully cutting through one of the excrescences, I was surprised to find a cavity in the interior that was packed nearly full of very minute whitish creatures, which proved to be four-legged mites or Phytoptids. Thus, these excrescences were the galls formed by the mites, and in which they were then hibernating. There were hundreds of the mites in each gall and all of them in a dormant condition. Thus, each twig was harbouring thousands of the little creatures. The fleshy portion of the galls, between the cavity and the onter skin, is of a dark magenta colour. The galls vary in size, some of the larger ones containing two or three cavities.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Entomological Society of Canada 1895

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

* Dr. Nalepa puts our knowledge of the Phytoptidæe on a scientific basis. He rightly discards all previous descriptions of the mites as inadequate and not definite enough for the determination of any species. He gives new detailed descriptions with excellent figures; and the species are renamed, usually with new names, but sometimes the old names are retained, as in the case of the Pear-leaf Blister-mite, which he calls Phytoptus pyri, n. sp. We should thus write pyri, Nalepa, instead of pyri, Scheuten. Dr. Nalepa's work should bxe in the hands of every one interested in the Phytoptidæ.