Kinsey: Gall Wasp Genus Cynips 
241 
GALL. — As described for the species, indistinguishable from that of 
variety leachii; on Quercus garryana. Figures 197, 209-210. 
RANGE. — British Columbia: Victoria (galls, acc. Weld 1926). 
Washington: San Juan Island, Tillicum, and Shelton (galls, acc. 
Weld 1926). White Salmon (galls, Kinsey coll.). 
Oregon: Goble (E. J. Perkins in U.S. Nat. Mus.). Portland, 
(types, E. 0. Hovey coll.). Odel, Eugene, Cottage Grove, Oakland, 
Canyonville, Wolf Creek, Kerby, Holland, McLeod, and Siskiyou (galls 
acc. Weld 1926). Cottage City (galls, O. J. Murie in U.S. Nat. Mus.). 
Albany (Silvestri in Kinsey coll.). Salem (Duncan, acc. McCracken 
and Egbert 1922). Corvallis (galls, H. A. Scullen in Kinsey coll.). 
Canby, Junction City, Roseburg, Grants Pass, and Ashland (galls, Kin- 
sey coll.). Marshfield (galls, C. L. Hubbs in Kinsey coll.). 
California: McConaughy in Siskiyou County (R. W. Patterson in 
Stanford coll.). 
Probably wherever Q. garryana occurs, except in the more southern 
range of the oak in California. Figure 34. 
TYPES. — 5 females, 10 galls. Holotype and paratype females and 
galls in the American Museum of Natural History; paratype females 
and galls in the Kinsey collection. Labelled Portland, Oregon; October, 
1905; E. O. Hovey collector. 
All of this type material was re-examined in making the present 
re-descriptions. 
PARASITES. — Callimome perplexum Huber (acc. Huber 1927). 
C. giganticum Huber (acc. Huber 1927). Very doubtful determina- 
tion of the parasite! 
C. calif ornicum (Ashmead) (acc. Huber 1927). 
This is the more northern of the two varieties known for 
the species. When we examine enough adults, we may find 
that some of the locality records given above do not represent 
this variety. The Fullaway (1911) description fits variety 
mirabilis better than leachii, indicating that mirabilis ranges 
southward at least as far as Siskiyou County, California. 
It was thru Beutenmiiller’s mistaken determination of ma- 
terial of this variety (the same material which I later used 
as types of mirabilis) that the present species was confused 
with Gillette’s maculipennis. Professor Trotter has sent me 
specimens of the Silvestri material which was reported as 
Amphibolips quercus-manis, and I find it to be typical 
mirabilis. 
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