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You would not believe your eyes
If ten million wasps arise
Out of their galls on the oak tree leaves
Okay, so this is really cool! You have this phenomenon where some plants grow edible appendages to their seeds to entice ants to carry them underground where they can safely sprout. And then you have wasps which lay their eggs on the leaves, stems, and other parts of plants and trigger the growth of galls (swellings) which both feed and protect the wasp larvae until they reach maturity.
The boy who was watching the ants noticed they were taking wasp galls underground, too. Further exploration found that the wasp larvae were unharmed inside the galls; the only thing the ants had eaten were edible appendages similar to those on the seeds they collected. The wasp larvae stayed safe inside the ant nest, feeding on their galls, until it was time to emerge and head back out to the surface.
So it turns out that the edible portions of the galls have the same sorts of fatty acids as the edible parts of the seeds. And those fatty acids are also found in dead insects. Scientists think that the wasps evolved a way to make the galls they created mimic the edible portions of the seeds to get the ants to collect the galls. This isn't the only example of wasps making use of ants as caretakers for their young, but it's a really fascinating example thereof--especially if you consider ants evolved from wasps at least 100 million years ago.
This is partially an ID request, but mostly just wondering if you know what's going on here? This is a gall on an oak tree, with two wasps (maybe of two different species?) just... hanging out on it? First picture is from one night, there was only one wasp, and i thought it was dead (i'm thinking it was not). Others are from tonight, both alive.
Regardless, it was very exciting to see, and I want to share!
Lovation is mid-atlantic, usa
Ok, so I believe these wasps are in the family Torymidae... they are parasitoids on gall forming wasps. So, they are probably gathering to insert their ovipositors into the galls to lay eggs on the wasp larvae that formed the galls.
Torymidae - Wikipedia
Family Torymidae - BugGuide.Net
Any wasp specialists wanna chime in on this one?
some galls I saw this year
top row: ram's-horn & spangle gall wasps, on oaks
bottom row: beech gall midge, on beech; willow gall sawfly, on willow

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[PHOTOS TAKEN: APRIL 13TH, 2026 | Image IDs: two photos showing the cross section of an "oak apple" gall, with a green outside and fibrous white inside, the core at the center being hard and yellow. The last two show the core cut open to expose the beige larva inside /End IDs.]
Disclaimer!: I would not recommend doing this to oak apples, as neither the oak apple galls nor the wasps that produce them are dangerous to the oak tree, and doing this to an oak apple like this will kill the wasp inside. The only reason why I myself cut this gall open is because 1. The gall had already fallen off of the tree, so it wasn't going to be getting any more nutrients from it, and 2. I wasn't actually initially certain what it was (though I did know it was a gall).
This is a kind of oak apple! It's a gall produced by gall wasps of the family Cynipidae, the larva injects chemicals into a leaf of an oak tree that create this round ball of fibrous plant material, the larva living in the center of this ball and sapping nutrients from the leaf!
Despite the name, a quick Disclaimer, Part 2 you should not eat oak apples, as they are fuuull of tannins that would make you feel pretty sick. It does, surprisingly, smell just like apples though! Plus, bonus fact, oak apples have been used in the making of ink!
It's gall week! Tell your friends!
Gall wasp (Cynipidae) galls
1. genus Atrusca (possibly Atrusca aggregata) | 2. Disholcaspis quercusglobulus | 3. Andricus quercuscalifornicus | 4. Antron douglasii | 5. Amphibolips nubilipennis | 6. Heteroecus sanctaeclarae | 7. Disholcaspis regina | 8. genus Amphibolips | 9. Diplolepis radicum