Life in a Gall: The Biology and Ecology of Insects that Live in Plant Galls
By (Author) Rosalind Blanche
CSIRO Publishing
CSIRO Publishing
1st June 2012
Australia
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Pest control / plant diseases
Ecological science, the Biosphere
Zoology and animal sciences
Applied ecology
Gardening: plants and cultivation guides
Commercial horticulture
632.3
80
Width 148mm, Height 215mm
What are plant galls and how are they caused This book introduces the Australian native insects that induce galls on plants and the plant species that host them. It explores the ways the insects have adapted to living part of their lives in the confined spaces of galls, and describes the strategies employed by different insect groups to find a suitable site to induce a gall, obtain food, mate and escape the gall. Life in a Gall also looks at the predators, parasitoids, inquilines, kleptoparasites and micro-organisms that prey on gall-inducing insects and the ways the insects defend themselves from these enemies.
Rosalind Blanche wrote her PhD thesis on the ecology of gall-inducing insects on Australian native plants. After graduating from Macquarie University in 1996, she worked as a research ecologist in Darwin, NT, first with CSIRO Sustainable Ecosystems and later at Charles Darwin University. She then moved to the Atherton Tablelands, far north Queensland, to carry out research for CSIRO Entomology. Since semi-retirement she has held positions with the Queensland Department of Primary Industry and Fisheries, worked on a Conservation International/CSIRO collaborative project and written two large reports for the Savanna Co-operative Research Centre. She has been an associate editor of the journal Austral Ecology since 2000.