Q. texana. Sending to Forbes lab. Accession # 2014-0319*A
Q. imbricaria. Sending to Forbes lab.
Accession # L-0656*A
Q. palustris. Sending to Forbes lab. Accession # 1995-0185*B
Q. alba. Sending to Forbes lab.
Accession # 2003-0251*D
I think this is a developing Callirhytis quercuscornigera rather than Callirhytis quercuspunctata because the tree is full of old quercuscornigera galls.
On Pin Oak/Q. palustris..
Specimen collected with permission of Green-Wood for Forbes Lab, University of Iowa.
On Willow Oak/Q. phellos.
Specimen collected with permission of Green-Wood for Forbes Lab, University of Iowa.
Note that this is from just across the street from a Pin Oak hosting this same gall wasp species, of which I am also submitting a specimen: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/215344501
On Willow Oak/Q. phellos.
Specimen collected with permission of Green-Wood for Forbes Lab, University of Iowa.
On Pin Oak/Q. palustris.
Specimen collected with permission of Green-Wood for Forbes Lab, University of Iowa.
Note that I am also submitting a specimen of this gall wasp species on a Willow Oak from just across the street from this Pin Oak. https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/215349891
On Pin Oak/Q. palustris.
Specimen collected with permission of Green-Wood for Forbes Lab, University of Iowa.
Note: this may be Callirhytis favosa. See this observation of what I think is definitely (?) C favosa from the same tree: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/215739488
Should be one of the 13-year periodic cicadas from the Great Southern Brood. Found in backyard prairie planting.