164 PARASITES OF GIPSY AND BROWN-TAIL MOTHS. 
sort of protection was utterly impossible. Automobile goggles were 
used to protect the eyes, various forms of respirators to prevent the 
inhalation of the spines, the hands were protected by rubber gloves, 
and the neck and face were swathed in accordance with the fancy 
of the operator. 
Two ingenious types of headdress (PI. IX, fig. 1) were devised by 
Mr. E. S. G. Titus in the hope that they would solve the difficulty, 
but it was found that they were not only unbearably hot, but that 
the glass fronts would quickly become covered with moisture which 
could not be removed. 
In 1907 a much larger quantity of this sort of material was recetved 
than during the previous summer, and it was practically a necessity 
that some method be devised which would do away with at least part 
of the trouble. After some little experimentation the arrangement 
shown in the illustration was the result. (Pl. IX, fig. 2.) It con- 
sisted of an ordinary show case, with sides and top of glass and with 
a wooden slide in the back. The two ends were removed and re- 
placed with boards in which armholes had been cut. Thick canvas 
sleeves were attached to these, through which the gloved hands of 
the operator were thrust, and it was found that the work could be 
done with what was, comparatively speaking, a minimum of dis- 
comfort and danger. ; 
In 1908, for several reasons which need not be entered into here, 
it was thought desirable to discontinue, temporarily, the importation 
of large quantities of the pupating caterpillars, and it was also demon- 
strated that all of the parasites which were secured from them would 
complete their transformations without being kept moist. The work 
of sorting over the boxes of parasite material was thus demonstrated 
to be unnecessary, and, consequently, in 1909, when large importa- 
tions were resumed, the covers were simply removed from the boxes, 
which were then stacked up in the large wooden tube cages (Pl. X, 
fig. 1), which had originally been constructed for the rearing of 
parasites from the imported hibernating nests. 
BROWN-TAIL MOTH PUPZ. 
Several attempts have been made to ship the pupe (PI. VII) 
of the brown-tail moth, packed in moss, as was at one time rec- 
ommended for the shipment of the pupe of the gipsy moth. Such 
attempts have usually been more or less satisfactory, but never as 
satisfactory as when the cocoons were collected in the field and placed 
loose in the boxes together with the active caterpillars. If only a 
small portion of the pupe is collected in the field, the only sure method 
of detecting their presence is by the occurrence of the pupal parasites 
