Wingless females have a pear-shaped bright green or yellowish-green body, undusted with wax particles, and grow to a maximum length of about. The cauda and cornicles are black and the antennae and legs are pale with brown tips. Winged females have a black thorax and green abdomen, often with three pairs of blackish spots on the front three segments and dark semicircular spots in front of and behind the cornicles.
Distribution
Aphis pomi has a widespread distribution in Europe, western Asia as far east as India and Pakistan, North Africa and North America. In Israel and the eastern United States, the more common aphid on apple trees is the spirea aphid, Aphis spiraecola. This has a wide range of host plants and a faster rate of reproduction than A. pomi, especially at high temperatures.
Ecology
Besides occurring on apple, Aphis pomi infests other plants in the family Rosaceae including pear, hawthorn, medlar, quince, mountain ash, rose and spiraea. It is an autoecious species, completing its life cycle on a single host species. Overwintering eggs hatch in spring and the aphids colonise the growing tips of the shoots causing the edges of the leaves to curl. These aphids are all viviparous females and give birth to other wingless aphids by parthenogenesis. In June some winged females are produced and these migrate to other branches and trees, and large aggregations build up by late summer. There may be ten to fifteen generations of aphid during the season and winds may disperse the winged forms over many kilometres. Sexual forms are produced in the autumn, winged egg-laying females and wingless males. Mating takes place and eggs are laid near the tips of the shoots, sometimes in large batches. These are green at first but soon turn black. Ants are often present among the colonies, feeding on the honeydew secreted by the aphids. The presence of the ants is beneficial to the aphids as the ants deter and remove predators that might feed on the aphids; these include the larvae of the midge Aphidoletes aphidimyza and parasitoids which lay their eggs in the aphid nymphs. High levels of infestation by the aphids can cause stunted shoots, disfigured fruit and prematureleaf fall, especially in young trees, and sooty mould may form on excess honeydew secretions.