I think this is a developing Callirhytis quercuscornigera rather than Callirhytis quercuspunctata because the tree is full of old quercuscornigera galls.
On Pin Oak/Q. palustris..
Specimen collected with permission of Green-Wood for Forbes Lab, University of Iowa.
On Willow Oak/Q. phellos.
Specimen collected with permission of Green-Wood for Forbes Lab, University of Iowa.
Note that this is from just across the street from a Pin Oak hosting this same gall wasp species, of which I am also submitting a specimen: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/215344501
On Willow Oak/Q. phellos.
Specimen collected with permission of Green-Wood for Forbes Lab, University of Iowa.
On Pin Oak/Q. palustris.
Specimen collected with permission of Green-Wood for Forbes Lab, University of Iowa.
Note that I am also submitting a specimen of this gall wasp species on a Willow Oak from just across the street from this Pin Oak. https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/215349891
On Pin Oak/Q. palustris.
Specimen collected with permission of Green-Wood for Forbes Lab, University of Iowa.
Note: this may be Callirhytis favosa. See this observation of what I think is definitely (?) C favosa from the same tree: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/215739488
Should be one of the 13-year periodic cicadas from the Great Southern Brood. Found in backyard prairie planting.
Q. georgiana. One gall. No galls like this for georgiana on gallformers. New host tree? Sending to Forbes lab. Tree obs at https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/215679573
Q. macrocarpa. Sending to Forbes lab
Q. imbricaria
Q. imbricaria