SEX INHERITANCE 125 
later work shows, he thinks, that they are different 
from gynandromorphs; he now calls them intersexes. 
The normal males and females of the gipsy moth 
differ not only in the characteristic sex differences 
of this group, but in other secondary sexual differ- 
ences also (Fig. 362). The Japanese varieties 
show these same differences. Japonica female by 
Tig. 36L.—Gypsy moths. A, normal male, B, normal female. 
C, D, “intersexes.” (After Goldschmidt.) 
dispar male gives equal numbers of daughters and 
sons, which are normal as to sex; but the reciprocal 
cross, dispar female by japonica male gives normal 
males and intersex or male-like females in equal 
numbers. 
The intersex females from the last and from other 
crosses show a wide range in structure, in color, 
