950 



PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL MUSEUM. 



vol.. xxvm. 



Fro. 13. — Ci8Tii)iA corAii- 



GARI.\, LARVA. 



Body stout, normal; a small pair of functionless feet on joint 8 and a 

 still smaller on(» on joint 7. Color black and orange. Gromid color 

 black; dorsal, subdorsal, lateral, and su])stigmatal yellow lines, broken 

 into dots, the lateral one nearly all lost, joined by 

 yellow bands on the posterior edges of the seg- 

 ments. A few yellow dots subventrally and on the 

 leg bases. Yellow color extensive in the thoracic 

 incisures. Skin smooth, but numerously annulate; 

 tubercles and settB minute. 



The pupa is shown in an open hammock of 



threads. It is pale, striped and banded with black. 



This species was described as BaltJda euryyrtede by Motschulsky, 



placed in the genus Yttlwra by Leech '^' and in Clstidiahy Swinhoe* 



Guenee\s specific name couaggarhi is the oldest. 



PHTHONANDRIA ATRILINEATA Butler. 

 EDA-SHAKUTUHI-MUSIII. 



Food plant: Moms aXba. 



The eggs are distributed on the back of a leaf. 



The larva resembles a twig in shape, as the Japanese name implies. 

 Head rounded, slightly bilobed, l)rown. Thoracic feet large, black 

 lined. Body njbust, joint 

 9 collared dorsall}'; tuber- 

 cles ii of joints 5 and 9 

 elevated, white. Mottled 

 red-brown, blackish, and 

 white without defined pat- 

 tern. An irregular pale 

 dorsal and subdorsal line 

 and white blotches on joints 

 5, 8, and 9. A divided 



black bar before the collar on joint 9 with three white dots below 

 tubercle ii. Pupa in a thin cocoon. 



PHTHONOSEMA TENDINOSARIA Bremer. 



CHA-NO-SHIMOFUKl-SHAKUTORI-MUSHl. 



Food plant: Then cJilnensls. 



The larva has the head flat before, bilobed, brown with numerous 

 angular black dots. Body robust, uniform, wood brown, annulate, 

 covered with numerous minute black or brown rings, most of which 

 contain white central dots. At the posterior end of joints 5 and 6 are 

 white raised elliptical spots like Tachinid eggs. These are repeated 



Fig. 14.— PHTHONANDRIA AKTKILINEATA, LAKYA. 



«Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. (6), XIX, 1897, p. 459. 

 ?'Cat. Lep. Oxf., II, 1900, p. 307. 



