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Field Trips

Field trips are full of opportunities to exercise and develop skills in observation, and to answer queries which the outdoors stimulates. There is a variety of inquiries centered around biological and physical interrelationships, which are fine subjects for broadening understanding of the science of the outdoor world.
One of the interesting features in vacant lots, along streamsides, and in brush patches are plant galls formed by insects, mites, fungi and viruses. On the oaks in the foothills of the Great Basin, numerous kinds of galls are produced, generally by tiny wasps. During the laying of the eggs on oak leaves, stemms and buds, the irritation caused by chemicals, usually of a hormonal nature produced by the wasp or the larvae, stimulates the plant to surround the area with a large mass of tissue. Within this mass are found the developing larvae of the wasps feeding on the plant tissue.
When the larvae have matured, they enter a seeming quiescent pupal stage, during which there is a radical reorganization of the materials in the tissues to result in the adult. Upon emerging from the pupal stage, the adults start the cycle again of eggs, larvae, pupae, and adults.
Oaks are not the only plants which have galls on their stems and leaves. One of the best sources of galls for study are the wild roses. Several kinds, each formed by a different species of insect, are to be found. If conditions are right, galls gathered in the field and brought to the laboratory in plastic bags may release the insects, which will present a challenge of identification.
Sagebrush, goldenrod, willows, wild cherry, and rabbitbrush almost invariably yield some galls. The sense of inquiry can run to great depths. The life histories of the wasps, flies, moths and others can be determined. Some of these are unknown to science.
Historically, oak bark was used extensively as a cource of tannic acid in the leather tanning industry. Early settlers found the oak bullet galls a rich source of tannin, and whole families made excursions into the hills to gather these insect-formed structures. This would be a rich field of research for alert students and teachers. Thus, field trips can be rewarding in many ways.
-- by Stan Mulaik



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