© Benaki Phytopathological Institute
Kapaxidi
8
lie to the side of the midrib between the lat-
eral veins; the erineum growths miss the
small secondary veins and appear as thick-
ened partitions. The erineum is particularly
characteristic in that each structure is cov-
ered with short, minute, unicellular hairs. Al-
though erineum patches are fewer on the
leaves, they are easily recognized because
of their size and color.
Aceria tristriatus (Nalepa) [Phytoptus tris-
triatus Nalepa, Eriophyes tristriatus (Nale-
pa)]
Common name: persian walnut leaf gall/
blister mite
Damage: It infests leaves, preferably young
and produces small, brown, hard pustules
that are about 1¼ mm in diameter. The
mites place these galls along midribs and
larger lateral veins, but in heavy infestations
blisters occur elsewhere. Badly galled leaves
are twisted and misshapen (Castagnioli and
Oldfield, 1996).
Cecidophyopsis vermiformis (Nalepa) [Phy-
toptus vermiformis Nalepa, Cecidophyes
vermiformis (Nalepa), Eriophyes vermi-
formis (Nalepa)]
Damage:
It is found on common hazel tree
usually in association with
Phytoptus avella-
nae
. It is considered of no economic impor-
tance.
Coptophylla lamimani (Keifer) [Phyllocop-
tes lamimani Keifer]
Damage: It lives as leaf vagrant on under-
side of hazel nut leaves causing no evident
symptoms. It is considered of no economic
importance.
Phytoptus avellanae Nalepa [Phytocop-
tella avellanae (Nalepa)]
Syn:
Acarus pseudogalarum
Vallot [
Phytoptus
pseudogalarum
(Vallot)]
Phytoptus coryli
Frauenfeld
Phytoptus coryligallorum
Targioti-Tozzeti
[
Eriophyes
coryligallorum
(Targioti-Tozzeti)]
Common name: filbert bud mite
Damage: This species is considered as a mi-
nor pest of cultivated hazelnut. It produces
bud galls, known as big buds, consisting of
an aggregation of swollen, thickened scale
leaves, often containing hundreds of mites.
Their feeding activities suppress the devel-
oping young leaves or inflorescences closed
within the scales. Eventually the enlarged
buds become dark and reddish brown as
the immature.
Aceria pistaciae (Nalepa) [Eriophyes pist-
aciae Nalepa]
Common name: pistachio bud mite
Damage: Lives on pistachio and turpentine
trees causing flower stalk brooming and
some leaf deformation on certain pistachio
species. The brooms are reddish and notice-
able.
Eriophyoids of Olive tree
Aceria cretica Hantzinikolis
Damage: The mite is found on the under leaf
surfaces causing subcircular patches (Hatz-
inikolis, 1989). It is a species that is reported
only from Crete Island.
Aceriaolea (Nalepa) [Eriophyes oleae Nale-
pa, Phytoptus oleae (Nalepa)]
Common name: olive bud mite
Damage: This mite is a pest of all varieties of
olive in the Mediterranean area and is espe-
cially injurious to young trees or the trees that
have pollarded. It causes leaf and fruit defor-
mation, and seriously reduces the amount
and quality of olives available for pickling. As
the result of mite infestations and due to the
distraction of the normal silvery stellate hairs,
mature leaves may show subcircular, irregu-
lar greenish patches that turn brown as ne-
crosis progresses. These patches may bulge
out as small chlorotic areas above the gener-
al leaf surface, giving the leaf an embossed
appearance. In heavy infestations, the mites
extend their feeding to leaf margins, which
results in deformations. Damage on young
fruit first appears as silvering, then browning
and ends in fruit deformation. Mites congre-
gate in large numbers at the stem end of the
fruit, and find shelter under sepal rudiments.
Most damage to fruit is confined to the stem.
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