
thumb|Rust mite, Aceria anthocoptes thumb|Eriophyes cerasicrumena, galls on cherry thumb|Aceria fraxini, galls
FAMILY
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via Wikidata · CC0
thumb|Rust mite, Aceria anthocoptes thumb|Eriophyes cerasicrumena, galls on cherry thumb|Aceria fraxini, galls
Eriophyidae is a family of more than 200 genera of mites, which live as plant parasites, commonly causing galls or other damage to the plant tissues and hence known as gall mites. About 3,600 species have been described, but this is probably less than 10% of the actual number existing in this poorly researched family. They are microscopic mites and are yellow to pinkish white to purplish in color. The mites are worm like, and have only two pairs of legs. Their primary method of population spread is by wind. They affect a wide range of plants, and several are major pest species causing substantial economic damage to crops. Some species, however, are used as biological agents to control weeds and invasive plant species. thumb|Aculops rhois, galls on poison ivy
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).