Plant galls are caused by a wide range of organisms, including animals such as insects, mites, and nematodes; fungi; bacteria; viruses; and other plants.
Insects Insect galls are the highly distinctive plant structures formed by some
herbivorous insects as their own microhabitats. They are plant tissue which is controlled by the insect. Galls act as both the habitat and food source for the maker of the gall. The interior of a gall can contain edible nutritious starch and other tissues. Some galls act as "physiologic sinks", concentrating resources in the gall from the surrounding plant parts. Galls may also provide the insect with physical protection from predators. Insect galls are usually induced by chemicals injected by the
larvae of the insects into the plants and possibly mechanical damage. After the galls are formed, the larvae develop inside until fully grown, when they leave. To form galls, the insects must take advantage of the time when plant cell division occurs quickly: the growing season, usually spring in temperate climates, but which is extended in the tropics. The
meristems, where plant cell division occurs, are the usual sites of galls, though insect galls can be found on other parts of the plant, such as the leaves,
stalks,
branches,
buds,
roots, and even
flowers and
fruits. Gall-inducing insects are usually species-specific and sometimes tissue-specific on the plants they gall.
Gall-inducing insects include
gall wasps,
gall midges,
gall flies,
leaf-miner flies,
aphids,
scale insects,
psyllids,
thrips, gall moths, and
weevils. Many gall insects remain to be described. Estimates range up to more than 210,000 species, not counting
parasitoids of gall-forming insects.
Cynipid wasps More than 1400 species of cynipid wasps cause galls. Some 1000 of these are in the tribe
Cynipini, their hosts mostly being
oak trees and other members of the
Fagaceae (the beech tree family). File:A juvenile root-knot nematode (Meloidogyne incognita) penetrates a tomato root - USDA-ARS.jpg|Juvenile
Meloidogyne penetrating a host plant File:Nematode nodules.jpg|Root-knot galls caused by the nematode
Meloidogyne Fungi Many
rust fungi induce gall formation, including
western gall rust, which infects a variety of
pine trees, and
cedar-apple rust. Galls are often seen in
Millettia pinnata leaves and fruits. Leaf galls appear like tiny clubs; however, flower galls are globose.
Exobasidium often induces spectacular galls on its hosts. The fungus
Ustilago esculenta associated with
Zizania latifolia, a wild rice, produces an edible gall highly valued as a food source in the
Zhejiang and
Jiangsu provinces of China. File:Gymnosporangium juniperii telial form.jpg|Gall on conifer
Juniperus virginiana caused by
Gymnosporangium (
Pucciniales) File:Rhododendron ferrugineum b.JPG|Leaf galls on
Rhododendron ferrugineum caused by fungus
Exobasidium rhododendri Bacteria and viruses Gall-causing bacteria include
Agrobacterium tumefaciens and
Pseudomonas savastanoi. Gall forming virus was found on rice plants in central Thailand in 1979 and named rice gall dwarf. Symptoms consisted of gall formation along leaf blades and sheaths, dark green discoloration, twisted leaf tips, and reduced numbers of tillers. Some plants died in the glasshouse in the later stages of infection. The causal agent was transmitted by the hemipteran bug
Nephotettix nigropictus after an incubation of two weeks. Polyhedral particles of 65 nm diameter in the cytoplasm of phloem cells were always associated with the disease. No serologic relationship was found between this virus and that of rice dwarf. File:Crown-gall detail.jpg|Crown gall on
Kalanchoe infected with
Agrobacterium tumefaciens File:Citrus_vein_enation_(CVEV)_on_Fortunella_japonica.jpg|Citrus vein enation woody gall on
Fortunella japonica caused by a pathogen with an aphid
vector Plants The
hemiparasitic plant
mistletoe forms woody structures sometimes called galls on its hosts. More complex interactions are possible; the parasitic plant
Cassytha filiformis sometimes preferentially feeds on galls induced by the cynipid wasp
Belonocnema treatae. == Uses ==