Adult
Andricus kollari are dark brown, and about in length. It has alternating sexual and asexual generations, each often taking two years to complete. Like all gall wasps, it causes the formation of parasitic galls on trees in which it lays its larvae. In May or June, a sexual female lays her eggs in the developing buds of susceptible oak trees using her
ovipositor. Chemicals produced by both the adult and developing wasps cause the formation of a
gall. Pedunculate oak (
Quercus robur), sessile oak (
Q. petraea) and the hybrid
Quercus × rosacea can all be parasitized. The host trees are often immature or retarded specimens; galls are rarer on older, healthier trees. The Turkey oak (
Q. cerris), introduced into
Britain in 1735, is required for the completion of the wasp's life cycle. The oak marble gall is frequently conflated with the
oak apple gall, caused by another gall wasp,
Biorhiza pallida. Oak marble galls are also known as the
bullet gall,
oak nut or
Devonshire gall. The developing spherical galls are green at first, brown later, and mature in August. Each gall contains a central chamber, with a single female wasp larva of the asexual generation, which emerges through a 'woodworm-like' hole as an adult winged gall-wasp in September. These asexual (agamic) females lay unfertilized eggs in the embryonic bud leaves of the Turkey oak, with galls slowly developing during winter, and are visible in March and April as small oval structures between the bud scales, looking like ant's eggs or pupae. The emerging adult gall-wasps in spring are the sexual generation, producing both males and females, which fly to the common oaks to initiate the formation of the summer marble gall. The level of attack by the insect varies greatly from year to year.
A. hispanicus was previously included in
A. kollari, but the two are genetically distinct and require different hosts to complete their life cycle, the sexual generation of
A. hispanicus developing on the
cork oak (
Quercus suber) instead of the Turkey oak (
Quercus cerris). ==Oak marble gall==