“…Gall size is one of the most important defensive phenotypes contributing to wasp survival (Stone et al, 2002; Stone & Schönrogge, 2003) and also likely to be positively correlated with body size, as was demonstrated in B. treatae and D. quercusvirens (Egan et al, 2013; Hood & Ott, 2010). Variation in gall size exhibited by one host‐associated population compared with the other could be due to differences in selection from natural enemy, selection for fecundity, or reduced fitness on non‐adapted hosts (Craig & Itami, 2011; Honěk, 1993; Hood & Ott, 2017; Marchosky & Craig, 2004) due to different host environments. However, bigger gall size was also found in multi‐chamber gall species such as A. quercuslanigera and C. quercusbatatoides , where the number of chambers rather than body size is more likely to be correlated with gall size (in A. quercuslanigera , the correlation between gall size and the number of chambers: r = 0.8288, p < 0.0001 [this study]; in C. quercusbatatoides , the correlation between gall size and the number of chambers: r = 0.69, p < 0.0001 [Weaver et al, 2020]).…”