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edible galls on sage

I found a reference to a type of edible gall that grows on sage plants in Crete, and is sold as a sweet in markets there. Can you tell me what species of sage that might be, and is it something we can grow in the Pacific Northwest? Will it develop tasty galls here?

 

It seems very likely that the species of sage is Salvia pomifera. That species name (‘fruit-like’) refers to the apple- or fruit-shaped galls. The webpage of Flora of Israel has a feature article by Professor Avinoam Danin on this type of Salvia that does indeed grow in Crete. He mentions another Cretan species that produces fruit-like gall structures, Salvia fruticosa.

Flowers of Crete (John Fielding and Nicholas Turland, Kew, 2005) describes these two common shrubby sages found in Crete. “They share similar habitats, pine woodland, olive groves, scrub, garrigue, and rocky places,” though S. fruticosa is mainly found in the lowlands, while S. pomifera is more montane. Salvia fruticosa (faskomilo in Greek) is used in herbal tea, but “both species produce globose stem galls, which are eaten raw (including the insect larvae inside) by Cretan children.” (The authors do not say why children–rather than adults?–prefer this treat!)

According to Greek horticulturist and Salvia expert Eleftherios Dariotis, “Salvia pomifera is the one that produces most galls and people like to eat them. Their taste is like a sagey apple and they are crunchy in texture. S.fruticosa produces galls as well, but not as often.”

In the Middle East, there is another species of sage that produces edible galls. Salvia dominica goes by the common name Bedouin peach, or khokh, because the galls it develops are fuzzy like the fruit.

The galls aroused curiosity among plant explorers in centuries past. 16th century French botanist Pierre Belon described them as “covered with hair and sweet and pleasant to the taste. They were collected at the beginning of May and sold by the people of Candie [Candia?] to neighboring villagers.” [Source: The American Naturalist, Volume 52 February-March 1918]

During his travels in Crete, the 17th/18th century French botanist Joseph Pitton de Tournefort came across a sage he called ‘Salvia cretica frutescens pomifera,’ a shrubby Cretan sage that bore apple-like fruit. An article in Saturday Magazine (vol. 16, 1840) mentions his observation of large galls “caused by the punctures of insects; these galls are firm, fleshy, semi-transparent tumours, swelling out from the branches of the plant, and supposed to be produced in the same manner as oak apples, by the puncture of an insect of the Cynips genus. They form an article of ordinary sale in the markets, and are called sage-apples. When preserved with sugar, these apples are regarded as a great delicacy.”

Salvia pomifera will grow in USDA hardiness zones 7-10, and both Salvia fruticosa and Salvia dominica will grow in USDA hardiness zones 8-11. To me, that sounds like potentially marginal hardiness given our tendency for wet (Salvia-rotting!) winters.

I have a feeling that you would not have much luck in attracting the right species of Cynipid gall wasp to Pacific Northwest-grown Salvias. The Aulax species of gall wasp is what causes the galls found on sage species growing in the Mediterranean region. According to the Field Guide to Plant Galls of California and Other Western States by Ron Russo (University of California Press, 2006), the gall wasps which may affect Salvia species in California and other western states are Rhopalomyia species. The galls they form are tubular in shape, and not fruit-like in appearance. There is no documentation on their taste.

rose gall and the scotch broom gall mite

I work on a restoration site and this fall I have been noticing weird fuzzy growths on many of the Nootka roses (Rosa nutkana) growing there. Do you know what is causing this? And is it related to similar strange growths on all of the Scotch broom? In the case of the broom, it actually kills them completely—they turn brown or black, and their roots are pretty much non-existent, which makes them very easy to uproot (which is what we are trying to do). I just don’t want to lose the roses or other desirable plants on the site.

 

What you are describing on the roses sounds like mossy rose gall (Diplolepis rosae). Washington State University Extension’s HortSense page says that these galls which are caused by cynipid wasps will not harm the host plants. You could picky them off the roses, but that seems impractical in a restoration site, and besides they are fairly benign and attractive curiosities. The particular species of cynipid wasps which cause it are unlikely to affect plants which are outside the rose family.

Your other question about dying Cytisus scoparius (Scotch broom) is especially interesting. I think what you are seeing on those browned and blackened plants is also a gall, caused by the Scotch broom gall mite (Aceria genistae). This insect is apparently on the cutting edge of controlling invasive broom. According to this informational page from University of California Statewide Integrated Pest Management Program, the mite was first seen on broom plants in Tacoma, WA and Portland, OR in 2005. It has since spread through the Pacific Northwest. An abstract of an article entitled “The Scotch Broom Gall Mite: Accidental Introduction
to Classical Biological Control Agent?”
(J. Andreas et al.) appeared in the 2011 XIII International Symposium on Biological Control of Weeds. Studies are underway to see if the mite affects non-target plants such as lupine. For now, you can rejoice in the fact that the mites are curbing the growth and reproduction of the broom, and making your work a little bit easier!

nail galls and other plant galls

On my walk this morning, I saw bizarre lipstick-red protrusions on leaves near the bottom of the tree, where bright green new shoots had sprouted. The tree had kind of sticky heart-shaped leaves, some of them about the size of the palm of my hand. Are these insects? A fungus or disease?

[Tiliagall] cover

 

Your photos show new growth on a linden tree, possibly large-leaved linden (Tilia platyphyllos). The red things are called nail galls (Eriophyaes tilia) and they are caused by the red nail gall mite.

According to Margaret Redfern’s book Plant Galls, this type of gall (in the form of a pouch) is “initiated in the spring by the fundatrices, females that have overwintered in cracks and crevices in the bark or under the scales of dormant buds.” The mite will wander over a new leaf’s underside and feed on individual cells which then collapse and die. The leaf domes up into a pointed pouch around that area. When the pouch is partly formed, the female mite lays her eggs inside it. The larvae hatch and feed there. Tilia nail galls have a thick nutritive layer, and each gall can contain 100-200 mites by summer. In fall, they disperse and overwinter.