The mites move onto the foliage in the spring, having overwintered in bark crevices and around buds. Individually,
Eriophyes tiliae are less than 0.2 mm long, but the chemicals they release while drinking
sap from the lower leaf epidermis have a dramatic, consistent and colourful effect. An upright, hollow, red finger-like extension grows from the leaf around the mite. Before the autumn, the mites, which up to now have been actively feeding and growing inside the galls, depart from these shelters and seek protected sites elsewhere on the tree. The mites will pass the winter in such locations and then the cycle will be repeated. This species is one amongst a number of gall-formers which can be superficially similar in appearance; however
E. tiliae tiliae is restricted to lime trees. == See also ==