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Growths on oak, knopper galls

Growths on oak, knopper galls

They look like weird knobbly fruit near the ends of oak twigs. Actually, they are galls, growths in the wood caused by a tiny wasp laying an egg there, acting as protective cover for the young wasps in the gall. These are knopper galls, and the wasp which produces them is another recent arrival. First recorded in England in the 1960s or 1970s, now quite common.

Growths on oak, knopper galls