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New Species of Japanese and 
Formosan Lepidoptera. 
By K. Nagano, 
The Nawa Entomological Laboratory, Gifu. 
On the 6th of June 1902 I found a series of 
こ = ミ ーーー ニー へ ヘム ヘム ヘス ヘニー ニー ニー ニー ニーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーー ム ーー ズー ヘー へ ヘム ーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーー 
hairy caterpillars which fed on Oleyera ochnacea, 
on Mt. Kinkwa near Gifu. About three hundred and 
fifty. years ago this mountain was occupied by No- 
bunaga Oda, the hero. The caterpillar very much 
ressembles the larva of Lymantria dispar but it is 
easily distinguished in its jumping down from the 
food plant at the slightest touch. 
Two of them pupated on the 25th of Jane and 
emerged on the 19th of July when I put them 
into a breeding cage. The moth was not only a 
different species from I. dispar but also an .unre- 
corded one from Japan. As it seemed to be an 
unknown species I described it as Lymantria sp? 
on “the Insect world” Vol. 13. No. 9. in Japanese 
with one plate. 
Afterwards I have tried to identify it in several 
literatures, but I have not yet found a name for it, 
so I have to describe it as a new species as follows. 
Lymantia nobunaga, sp. n.°{ Plate 
RELV sifigiod, 2:5 
Lymantria sp? Nagano, The Insect World. Vel. 
13. pp. 402-407, Pl. XX (1909) 
