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Photo#16165
Kuno scale - Eulecanium kunoense - female

Kuno scale - Eulecanium kunoense - Female
San Leandro, Alameda County, California, USA
April 30, 2005
Size: 5mm
After Jim McClarin suggested a gall for this image, I got curious as to what was inside these things. I took four of them off my neighbor's tree and opened them all up.

This photo shows one of these things cut open. Hundreds of what appear to be eggs(?) spilled out. The inside of the thing was hollow, the outer shell was hard, and attached to the outer shell was a layer of squishy wet stuff. The eggs(?) that didn't fall out onto the paper are sticking to the squishy wet stuff.

Galls seem like a possibility, but these black & red things do not in any way seem to be part of the tree. They don't seem like plant growths. So I don't know. I'm baffled.

Of the four "things" I opened up, two were full of eggs (or whatever they are). One had nothing in it except the squishy wet layer around the hollow hole inside. The 4th one turned into a very wet, orangish mess. I won't post the photo of that one.

I hadn't seen these scales/galls since I took their photos on April 1st. Most of them are blacker in color now, but otherwise they look the same, and the ants are still farming them. The ants were upset with me for removing them from the tree.

Images of this individual: tag all
Kuno scale - Eulecanium kunoense - female scale? - Eulecanium kunoense

Moved
Moved from Soft Scale Insects.

gall?
A homeowner brought a "gall like thing" that greatly resembled this into the local Extension office. It had been on a fruit tree in the owner's yard. The "gall" was sent to the State Entomology ID Lab.The lab report stated that it was the egg mass of the Eastern Tent Caterpillar. Any possibility that that's what this is?

Scale.
Your descriptions really "scream" "scale" to me, especially the "gall-like scales" in the family Kermesidae. Might be Kermes or Allokermes, or something else:-) At family level, though, these sure fit.

 
scale
Eric,

The Kermesidae scales do resemble mine. However, so do some of the Coccidae scales. In particular, here is one ScaleNet Eulecanium kunoense photo that looks exactly like mine. The photo isn't as clear, but if you query their site, you can get a bunch of Eulecanium photos--none great, but you can get the gist of what they look like. (See another discussion here about my contact with ScaleNet.)

According to Witney Cranshaw's "Garden Insects" and Borror et al's "An Introduction to the Study of Insects", Kermesidae scales are all associated with oak trees. The scales in my photos were on an apple tree. Some Coccidae scales (including Eulecanium kunoense) do live on fruit trees.

I don't know anything for sure though. There is not a lot of information out there on scales, and they are not easy to ID.

Joyce

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