In the early summer the gall midge lays a cluster of up to forty eggs in young bramble shoots. Rapid
cell growth of the tissue creates a rounded swelling of 5 x 2 cm in the stem, which sometimes has longitudinal fissures, and contains several irregular cavities with larvae. The cavities are lined with fungal
mycelium on which the larvae feed. When young the larvae are white, and later in the summer and winter are orange-red. Usually the gall develops on one side of the shoot, but occasionally spreads to the other side. Initially the gall is green, but changes to reddish-brown as it matures. Larvae pupate the following spring and the adults emerge in the spring. Sometimes the gall is in a leaf
petiole.
Lasioptera rubi galls have been found on the following species; •
Rubus caesius – European dewberry •
Rubus canescens •
Rubus gillotii •
Rubus grabowskii •
Rubus idaeus – raspberry •
Rubus nessensis •
Rubus fruticosus – blackberry •
Rubus plicatus •
Rubus praecox •
Rubus ulmifolius – elmleaf blackberry ;Similar species Galls of the
gall wasp,
Diastrophus rubi, are elongate (2–15 cm long and circa 1 cm wide) compared with the gall of
Lasioptera rubi, which is rounded (5 x 2 cm). ==Distribution==