What Gall! The Crazy Cribs of Parasitic Wasps | Deep Look

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  • Опубликовано: 17 ноя 2014
  • Plenty of animals build their homes in oak trees. But some very teeny, tricky wasps make the tree do all the work. And each miniature mansion the trees build for the wasps' larvae is weirder and more flamboyant than the next.
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    “What nerve!” you might say. What… gall! And you’d be right. The wasps are called gall-inducers.
    ---+ What do oak galls look like?
    If you’ve ever spent a Summer or Fall around oak trees - such as the stalwart Valley Oak - Quercus lobata, or the stately Blue Oak, Quercus douglasii - you may be familiar with the large, vaguely fruity-looking objects clinging to the branches and leaves. Commonly called oak apples, these growths are the last thing you’d want to put in your mouth. They are intensely bitter, loaded with tannin compounds - the same compounds that in modest amounts give red wine its pleasant dryness, and tea its refreshing earthy tang.
    That said, the oak apple’s powerful astringency has been prized for millennia. Tanning leather, making ink or dye, and cleaning wounds have been but a few of the gall’s historical uses.
    But on closer inspection of these oaks - and many other plants and trees such as willows, alders, manzanitas, or pines - you can find a rogue’s gallery of smaller galls. Carefully peeking under leaves, along the stems and branches, or around the flower buds and acorns will likely lead you to unexpected finds. Smooth ones. Spiky ones. Long skinny ones, flat ones, lumpy, boxy ones. From the size of a golf ball down to that of a poppy seed. These structures wear shades of yellow, green, brown, purple, pink and red - and sometimes all of the above. A single tree may be host to dozens of types of gall, each one caused by a specific organism. And their shapes range from the sublime to the downright creepy. One tree may be encrusted with them, like a Christmas tree laden with ornaments and tinsel; and the next tree over may be almost completely free of galls. Why? It’s a mystery.
    ---+ How do oak galls form?
    Galls are generally formed when an insect, or its larvae, introduce chemicals into a specific location, to push the plant’s growth hormones into overdrive. This can result in a great profusion of normal cells, increased size of existing cells, or the alteration of entire plant structures into new, alien forms.
    Lots of creatures cause them; midges, mites, aphids, flies, even bacteria and viruses. But the undisputed champs are a big family of little wasps called Cynipids- rarely exceeding the size of a mosquito, a quarter of an inch in length.
    “These tiny wasps cannot sting,” says Dr. Kathy Schick, Assistant Specialist/Curatorial Assistant at the Essig Museum of Entomology at UC Berkeley. “Gall-inducers are fascinating in that they are very specialized to their organ of the host plant.”
    ---+ What are oak galls?
    These wasp houses are not homes exactly, but more akin to nurseries. The galls serve as an ideal environment for wasp larvae, whether it is a single offspring, or dozens. The tree is tricked into generating outsize amounts of soft, pillowy tissue inside each gall, on which the larvae gladly gorge themselves as they grow.
    Full article: blogs.kqed.org/science/2014/11...
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Комментарии • 595

  • @7377H4
    @7377H4 7 лет назад +2139

    I would TOTALLY live in a giant banana for my whole childhood. Great work, Deep Look!

  • @avariceseven9443
    @avariceseven9443 5 лет назад +1632

    You'd think the oak would be harmed in someways but no, it's oak-ay.

  • @jincyquones
    @jincyquones 7 лет назад +1784

    For years, I've noticed these little, rather unremarkable, tannish-colored balls of fuzz on the bottom of fallen leaves from the live oaks all over my area. They are extremely common, and especially under the live oak in front of my grandmother's house, almost every leaf on the ground has at least one. I've always assumed they were a natural part of the leaf or a fungus or something. After this video reminded me of them, I looked up what they were... and yes, it turns out they are woolly oak galls! I can't wait to tell my grandmother her oak tree has been a huge wasp nursery all these years! This is my new favorite educational channel!

    • @KQEDDeepLook
      @KQEDDeepLook  7 лет назад +266

      Excellent! Once you know about them, you start seeing galls everywhere.

    • @robsonwilianwinchester9726
      @robsonwilianwinchester9726 7 лет назад +20

      Deep Look you are my favorite Channel of education tooo!!!!

    • @meganstouffer1751
      @meganstouffer1751 6 лет назад +17

      The tree that recently fell at my grandparents house you should drop one the size of crab apples or small ping-pong balls are used to collect them and when you squish them they look like they were bleeding they were so cool

    • @oddpotato4038
      @oddpotato4038 6 лет назад +6

      +CelestialDragon stouffer omg i think that would be gross... but encountering one could be ammusing enough rather than squishing it though 😂... I may never know since I live at the other side of the world

    • @danstiver9135
      @danstiver9135 6 лет назад +7

      The large tan circular oak galls are sometimes called “oak apples”, though they’re certainly not edible.

  • @littenarmy8513
    @littenarmy8513 7 лет назад +454

    No wonder my tree leaves looks like it has warts

    • @jenbroccoli861
      @jenbroccoli861 7 лет назад +2

      Awesomeness Films Bol man!!!! 😂😂😂😂😂😂😭😭😭😭😭😭

    • @AphidKirby
      @AphidKirby 4 года назад +8

      they could also be tick galls! some species of tick do the same, they look more like warts

  • @FatCatz3001
    @FatCatz3001 7 лет назад +401

    I just started noticing galls on various tree species around on my college campus. I knew they were called galls, but I just assumed it was a type of tree cancer or tumor. Never have I been so happy as to be so wrong.

    • @KQEDDeepLook
      @KQEDDeepLook  7 лет назад +60

      Once you know about them, you see them everywhere.

    • @GladG
      @GladG 5 лет назад +4

      Deep Look That’s kinda foreboding...

  • @kendalk.3202
    @kendalk.3202 8 лет назад +201

    What. What. What. How have I not heard of theses incredible insects before? This is real, right? I mean, it has to be real...but how could I not know about these beautiful natural structures? This is nuts!

    • @kendalk.3202
      @kendalk.3202 8 лет назад +23

      I mean, those bouncing ones? Incredible. The natural world never ceases to amaze.

    • @KQEDDeepLook
      @KQEDDeepLook  8 лет назад +28

      Yep - they are real. They are just so small you just don't notice them easily.

    • @manbeard8678
      @manbeard8678 6 лет назад +1

      I just and you weren't kidding Deep Look.
      Those things are as tiny as aphids.

    • @SMCUBEKOREAN2
      @SMCUBEKOREAN2 5 лет назад

      Yes, they are even crazier within insect hosts.

  • @ShafakCool
    @ShafakCool 8 лет назад +537

    Wasps are the villains of animal kingdom.

  • @rrozinak
    @rrozinak 8 лет назад +153

    I love your videos but I have to correct you. A gallbladder doesn't produce bile. A gallbladder is used for storing the bile produced by a liver.

    • @KQEDDeepLook
      @KQEDDeepLook  8 лет назад +54

      +roman Ah, yes. Thanks for finding that! And thank you for watching!

    • @mysmirandam.6618
      @mysmirandam.6618 3 года назад +3

      Ooooooooo goood catch

    • @Pikachu-ls5qy
      @Pikachu-ls5qy 3 года назад +2

      Well it does secretes bile juice and stores the left over bile juice which doesn't gets used.

  • @RaystormTheWise
    @RaystormTheWise 5 лет назад +58

    I don't wanna climb trees anymore.

  • @bizmarkie9112
    @bizmarkie9112 7 лет назад +11

    I love how these videos are just as equally beautiful and artistic looking as they are fascinating and entertaining. The team behind the making of this series must all have beautiful minds and ideas with great appreciation for the wonders of nature.

  • @KQEDDeepLook
    @KQEDDeepLook  9 лет назад +101

    *What Gall! The Crazy Cribs of Parasitic Wasps | Deep Look*
    Plenty of animals build their homes in oak trees. But some very teeny, tricky wasps make the tree do all the work. “What nerve!” you might say. What… gall! And you’d be right. They’re called gall-inducers. And each miniature mansion the trees build for the wasps' larvae is weirder and more flamboyant than the next.
    Article and more pictures at KQED Science: goo.gl/YWsNlO

  • @fen4554
    @fen4554 7 лет назад +638

    Uh... Could have gone into a little detail about HOW the wasp alters the trees' (dna?) to do this. Cute story but more information would be better.

    • @KQEDDeepLook
      @KQEDDeepLook  7 лет назад +192

      Thanks for the feedback! You can read a bit more here: ww2.kqed.org/science/2014/11/18/what-gall-the-crazy-cribs-of-parasitic-wasps/

    • @smallshinybeetle
      @smallshinybeetle 7 лет назад +27

      So, does the wasp induce the oak tree to produce the structures? Or does the wasp provide an initial structure with the eggs which the tree then nourishes?

    • @thehantavirus
      @thehantavirus 6 лет назад +6

      the tree also does it as response to the presence of an infection or injury.

    • @katherinenorthupschick623
      @katherinenorthupschick623 5 лет назад +1

      lolaz wabby no

    • @kirklanyoshinaga8953
      @kirklanyoshinaga8953 3 года назад

      @@KQEDDeepLook I must say that that was a fascinating read. Thanks for the link.

  • @megapiglatin2574
    @megapiglatin2574 2 года назад +1

    Parasitic wasps are, by far, my favorite group of wasps! So much variety and so many layers of parasitizing....

  • @RachelsRoth
    @RachelsRoth 5 лет назад +5

    1:03
    *Croissant : Am i a joke to you?*

  • @ShadeSlayer1911
    @ShadeSlayer1911 7 лет назад +10

    I actually did a group project on Gall Wasps in college. And one of our group members personally experienced the bitter flavor meant to ward off potential prey. He was like "this looks sorta like an apple, I wonder if it tastes anything like one."

  • @tomcrews2381
    @tomcrews2381 4 года назад +4

    1:17
    The forbidden pop rocks...

  • @Jamex07
    @Jamex07 5 лет назад +14

    Cool. I had no idea. Now I want an arboretum filled with different gall wasp species. I guess I'll add to the list, right underneath my dream aquarium filled with hermit crabs and tiny 3d printed glass shells.

  • @ScienceByMike
    @ScienceByMike 6 лет назад +27

    That was fascinating!

  • @TaRealJudas
    @TaRealJudas 6 лет назад +1

    Aww she made wasp seem so cute lol!!!😍

  • @Trizzle83be
    @Trizzle83be 8 лет назад +7

    I love these videos, awesome footage, great editing and the narrator is very good too.

  • @ZGlove.
    @ZGlove. 2 года назад +1

    "I'm not mocking you at all."
    "You got some friggin' gall.
    Keep it up, kid. You'll stick the landing on a freefall."

  • @mayhapsmoo
    @mayhapsmoo 4 года назад +2

    Wait, im an oak tree, and my classmates are wasps? I KNEW IT

  • @Weredawg
    @Weredawg 7 лет назад +4

    Wow, I always wondered what those things I found on leaves were. Very cool and informative

  • @ashoozq
    @ashoozq 5 лет назад +1

    Literally had no clue of these things growing trees... very out of the blue video and informative! Love it! 👌🏽

  • @karenkarnage86
    @karenkarnage86 6 лет назад +2

    FINALLY! I've been watching these things develop for months. I thought they were fungi! Thanks for clearing that up for me and feeding my nightmares. I'll be moving now.

  • @jimmyHowerton
    @jimmyHowerton 9 лет назад +12

    This is a pretty awesome series, you guys deserve more recognition for sure

    • @KQEDDeepLook
      @KQEDDeepLook  9 лет назад +2

      jimmy Howerton Jimmy, thank you, we appreciate the encouragement. We will be releasing 2 per month for the next year (with a few short breaks for production & holidays). Do you live in an area where you can see oak galls?

    • @jimmyHowerton
      @jimmyHowerton 9 лет назад +1

      I live in an area with a ton of oak trees so I probably do; next time I go out I'll definitely have a look for them!

    • @KQEDDeepLook
      @KQEDDeepLook  9 лет назад +1

      jimmy Howerton Great! Take pictures and we'll try to identify them.

    • @Dragon-Slay3r
      @Dragon-Slay3r Год назад

      Is this where I milk the gall bladder from planet Uranus?

  • @SHADOWSKY10
    @SHADOWSKY10 2 года назад +2

    I heard from Tom Wessels that some galls are actually recently thought to supply more energy to the tree through photosynthesis than the amount of energy the trees are sinking into the gall. It might not be simple parasitism.

  • @sketchalater4656
    @sketchalater4656 5 лет назад +1

    That wasp actually has a cute face!!

  • @Jordan_Dossou
    @Jordan_Dossou 8 лет назад +47

    good job narrating Amy😊👍 I'm 13 and I just found about this today. um binge watching all the episodes

  • @kittie-star1151
    @kittie-star1151 6 месяцев назад

    Completely mind blown 🤯. A childhood memory has been unlocked 😅. There’s lots of oak trees in Louisiana and I would see the galls everywhere especially on the leaves but never knew what they were!!

  • @redfelixus
    @redfelixus 8 лет назад +8

    I love the quality of these videos, it looks and sounds good, keep them up! :)

    • @KQEDDeepLook
      @KQEDDeepLook  8 лет назад +1

      +C Pramudya Thank you so much!

    • @zf5249
      @zf5249 8 лет назад +1

      +Deep Look 4 more days till the next video right?

  • @boris978
    @boris978 3 года назад +1

    The mighty oak stands tall and proud, as little wars of subterfuge carry on upon its leaves and branches.

  • @danstiver9135
    @danstiver9135 6 лет назад +3

    Gall mites also make galls in tree leaves, and they spend the majority of their lives within these galls. If I remember correctly they only leave the galls to mate.

  • @brianfriis4784
    @brianfriis4784 2 года назад +1

    Oak gall is a principal component in ink. One could say (with a bit of a stretch) that the human scholastic work for many many centuries also rests on these tiny parasites.

  • @jeb8755
    @jeb8755 7 лет назад

    I absolutely love you deeplook!

  • @smithzorzacharia5692
    @smithzorzacharia5692 8 лет назад +14

    The only video I have seen with no dislikes.AWESOME!!!

  • @MichaelSHartman
    @MichaelSHartman 5 лет назад +1

    It is fascinating that the galls are so different, instead of the oak healing over it. How does the genetic code of the parasite affect the oak cells?

  • @Huffy-dl6mi
    @Huffy-dl6mi 6 лет назад

    I like how most of the galls fit with the name of the wasps

  • @NikoruJoy11
    @NikoruJoy11 8 лет назад +1

    This is so neat! The only parasitic wasps I knew about are the ones in tomato horn worms. We'd keep them as pets to see what kind of moth they'd turn into but they'd always have the wasps in/on them and die.

  • @CaptnBadassary
    @CaptnBadassary 5 лет назад

    Even though they are mostly naturally chaotic, that first little wasp was kinda cute

  • @Wardirt
    @Wardirt 7 лет назад +1

    how interesting! I have seen them often, and never even thought of how to look them up. I love this channel!

  • @dancingflowers26
    @dancingflowers26 4 года назад +1

    I found one of these in my backyard, though it had already hatched, I picked it apart and looked at it, I found a lot of shed exoskeletons

  • @monitoredactivity8649
    @monitoredactivity8649 7 лет назад +1

    Absolutely astounding.

  • @4D0R1NGF4N
    @4D0R1NGF4N 11 месяцев назад

    I've actually seen some of these galls before and always wondered what they were. Thank you for the knowledge!

  • @beefjerky4127
    @beefjerky4127 4 года назад +9

    "Imagine you're an oak tree"
    Wasp mama: Hey, can u build me a nest 4 my bbs?
    Me: ofc, you waspie.

  • @producttester5462
    @producttester5462 6 лет назад

    Amazing production. Thanks!

  • @faroshscale
    @faroshscale 5 лет назад

    That is probably the coolest thing I've ever seen.

  • @user-nn5my1lc5q
    @user-nn5my1lc5q 4 года назад

    The eyes of that mama wasp are pretty freakkin adorable.

  • @ironclad3948
    @ironclad3948 2 года назад

    woah, thanks deep look!

  • @The-art-9
    @The-art-9 6 лет назад +1

    After watching this I went outside to an oak tree to see if I’d find any of those galls and I was surprised to see how many there were!

  • @Redditard
    @Redditard 5 лет назад

    It's Good that DEEP LOOK had no advertisement

  • @onkennyj
    @onkennyj 6 лет назад

    Amazing !!!

  • @MistaHahn117
    @MistaHahn117 7 лет назад +1

    If the tree isn't harmed, it's not really a parasitic relationship - more a commensal one

  • @motaaaa
    @motaaaa 6 лет назад

    Now this is strange and unexpected. Awesome.

  • @3Hellokittykitty
    @3Hellokittykitty 6 лет назад

    These galls range from looking like flowers, fuzzy discolored cotton balls, weird ceramic art shapes.. I feel the urge to pluck them off >.>

  • @mac081793
    @mac081793 9 лет назад +22

    Do you guys have a link to Seth Manuel, the music producer for these?

    • @KQEDDeepLook
      @KQEDDeepLook  9 лет назад +7

      You bet. His name is Seth Samuel, www.sethgsamuel.com/ .

  • @centrosepedere9394
    @centrosepedere9394 3 года назад

    jumping oak gall wast is like popcorn bounces when cooked

  • @aapjew18
    @aapjew18 7 лет назад +2

    Hey, deep look. You make some pretty cool videos. I'm gonna be watching more from you.

  • @InsaneFirebat
    @InsaneFirebat 3 года назад +1

    Seems like a mutual relationship to me. Wasps are usually predators of insects that eat leaves.

  • @piapear560
    @piapear560 6 лет назад

    The first wasp featured had an oddly cute appearance. Maybe it's the wide eyes that has me so entranced.

  • @Fatima-fo4bv
    @Fatima-fo4bv 4 года назад

    This is work of art

  • @earthtamerronan6352
    @earthtamerronan6352 3 года назад

    Gall Wasp: I have a nice safe house here so other bugs can go bother someone else. Parasitoid Wasps: No, I don't think I will.

  • @t-bonejones3576
    @t-bonejones3576 2 года назад +1

    These wasps often control pests on their hosts keeping them healthy. Much more of a symbiotic relationship really

  • @keatonpgaming4398
    @keatonpgaming4398 4 года назад

    Gall-lee
    What a video!

  • @irwbcg
    @irwbcg 6 лет назад

    wow, this channel is really good, many things i never heard before

  • @cassandracrakes532
    @cassandracrakes532 6 лет назад +1

    As a kid I would find these vibrating, jumping "rocks" in the park and I called them "jumping beans". I thought they were like the beans from Jack and the Beanstalk (I was 3-6 years old). Turns out they were galls!

  • @doccastro
    @doccastro 4 года назад +2

    Oak lives
    Wasp : free real estate literally lol

  • @fiacarolan6512
    @fiacarolan6512 7 лет назад

    everyday I come home from class and lay in bed and binge on these

  • @lloydlutz3288
    @lloydlutz3288 4 года назад

    Incredible video love nature

  • @sallyhsuu
    @sallyhsuu 7 лет назад +5

    Addicting videos.

    • @KQEDDeepLook
      @KQEDDeepLook  7 лет назад

      Thanks, Sally! How did you find us?

  • @TWBJ_01
    @TWBJ_01 7 лет назад +1

    Them wasps can communicate with trees. Now that's the misssing link

  • @heikori
    @heikori 4 года назад +1

    "And each gall is weirder and more FLAMBOYANT-"
    Uzui Tengen? Is that u

  • @Rick__C-137
    @Rick__C-137 6 лет назад +1

    Cool vid!

  • @Japan401
    @Japan401 2 года назад

    Gall wasps?! Time to put this in my wildlife diary

  • @verdatum
    @verdatum 7 лет назад +1

    I found myself searching for time-lapse video of galls being formed and suddenly thought "how amazing would it be if Deep Look could capture some footage like that?" Then the very next video I try in my quest has a sidebar link right here. "Oh yeah, Deep Look has already done a piece on galls and of course, it's gorgeous." But y'know, if you ever felt like doing a followup.....timelapse plz?? :D

  • @memine226
    @memine226 8 лет назад +7

    Not enough depth but still wonderful footage. Like

  • @Ikeneengameplays
    @Ikeneengameplays 9 лет назад +2

    Whoa this channel is amazing is full of interesting stuff!

    • @KQEDDeepLook
      @KQEDDeepLook  9 лет назад

      Manuel Emilio Vasuqez Gomez Thanks, Manuel - what other things should be the subject of a Deep Look?

  • @crystalm4324
    @crystalm4324 5 лет назад

    That’s wild!

  • @rogergriffith286
    @rogergriffith286 6 лет назад

    Cecidology - a fascinating topic. You seem to have rather more spectacular galls on oaks than we do in the UK.

  • @Letsdiscover2023
    @Letsdiscover2023 Месяц назад

    wow, its very clear. thank you mam.

  • @WobblesandBean
    @WobblesandBean 3 года назад

    Wasps are as fascinating as they are terrifying.

  • @MAR_abisal
    @MAR_abisal 3 года назад

    RIP that one person who bite one of those things thinking it was a fruit

  • @TimefourCraft
    @TimefourCraft Год назад

    im disturbed yet amazed

  • @Galebreth
    @Galebreth 3 года назад

    Makes you think of the Yggdrasil. And the gall as tiny worlds all in their own

  • @yoburgerkingimdarapking4023
    @yoburgerkingimdarapking4023 5 лет назад

    they're so creative

  • @keepitlit1518
    @keepitlit1518 7 лет назад

    That Oak tree is dope. He does not even know.

  • @alankritarani6835
    @alankritarani6835 6 лет назад +1

    Its a wonderful channel,,science backed...love it😍 love all its videos

  • @starsilverinfinity
    @starsilverinfinity 5 лет назад +1

    That intro tho for the moth

  • @abirmef9510
    @abirmef9510 2 года назад

    Wooooooow insane 🔥🔥🔥👏👏👏👏

  • @emeralddj5590
    @emeralddj5590 5 лет назад +5

    But it also means when they hatch there'll be armys of wasps outside you're house😱

  • @lusciouslocks8790
    @lusciouslocks8790 7 лет назад

    Okay but like this is the one time I've seen an ad on RUclips for something I've never heard of and got so immediately intrigued I subscribed within a few minutes.

  • @mattdlseeryseery8803
    @mattdlseeryseery8803 4 года назад

    It looks nice...even nicer with the tree unharmed

  • @stuv1996
    @stuv1996 2 года назад

    Would love to see you guys do the mud dauber!

  • @mariomenezes5974
    @mariomenezes5974 3 года назад

    I was glad the tree was OK at the end.

  • @StrifeRider-rx1yu
    @StrifeRider-rx1yu Год назад

    Ngl, some of the hues are quite pretty

  • @Itsreekoh
    @Itsreekoh 7 лет назад

    I was expecting the wasps to have an intro like MTV cribs pretending they didn't know they were gonna film their house lol

  • @garrettstandish2722
    @garrettstandish2722 6 лет назад

    I always wondered what those things were on oak trees. Hehe now I can brag to my aunt that I know what those are. And I’m loving the content! Even though I’m late to the show :)

  • @bari2883
    @bari2883 4 года назад +1

    The bsby wasps nursery is exotic looking. The babirs not so much.🌱🌸🐴

  • @antarcfroze
    @antarcfroze 4 года назад

    1:08 AAYYYY ISMEEEE

  • @tubbyqueen
    @tubbyqueen 4 года назад

    What gall indeed!