
Many samples of poplar or cottonwood leaves have come in lately
with large, round bumps on the petioles of the leaves or perhaps
at the very base of the leaf. These are often associated with
the leaves falling from the tree itself to the ground and
occasionally in substantial numbers.
![]() |
| Galls on poplar petiole |
The round bumps are called galls and are caused, in this case, by a particular aphid species, Pemphigus populitransversus, or the poplar petiole gall aphid. The gall itself contains many aphid that will leave the gall when mature. Essentially the gall is a house for the immature aphids to grow up in.
This aphid overwinters in the egg stage on cottonwood or
poplar twigs. In spring, the eggs hatch about the same time as
the flushing of the foliage. The nymphs, or juvenile aphids,
feed on the developing petioles, stimulating the formation of a
hollow, round or oval gall. The aphids secrete a white, waxy
material which coats their body and the inside of the gall.
They feed for about two weeks and the females bear live young
that mature into winged aphids. These winged females will leave
the gall through the slit that is apparent on the side of the
gall and fly to an alternate host.
![]() |
| Slit in gall for aphids to exit from |
The alternate hosts are in the Brassica family so typically mustard or canola. They spend the remainder of the summer on the alternate host before flying back to the trees in the fall to lay eggs that spend the winter.
These aphids may cause some leaf drop and certainly are
responsible for the formation of the interesting galls, but they
do not do any lasting damage to the trees. The galls are
impenetrable to insecticides so any applications of control
measures will have no effect on the aphids at all. Some years,
as in 2008, the populations are quite a bit larger and more
noticeable, especially with the increased leaf drop. But they
are nothing more than an interesting curiosity and do not cause
any tree mortality.
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
| Cut open gall | Immature petiole gall aphid | Winged, mature petiole gall aphid |
For further information, contact your GO representative.