178 PARASITES OF GIPSY AND BROWN-TAIL MOTHS. 
and of the resolve to investigate the matter thoroughly when the 
opportunity should arise. In accordance with this resolve an inten- 
sive study of the Japanese importations was begun in December, 
1908. A large number of ege masses, which showed by the exit 
holes (of Schedius) that they had been freely attacked by some para- 
site which had issued in the fall, were selected, then ‘‘sifted,’’ and 
the eggs from each mass were then carefully examined and sorted 
into three lots, composed, respectively, of the healthy eggs, the eggs 
from which parasites had issued, and the eggs which were neither 
one nor the other. Those falling in this third division were scrutin- 
ized again with still more care. Anastatus was quickly recognized, 
in most instances, and eges containing its larve placed aside. In 
the majority of the remainder there was evidently no hfe, but in 
a considerable number minute, white larve could more or less 
plainly be seen, surrounded and more than half concealed by the 
remains of the embryonic caterpillars which had been destroyed. 
These eggs were isolated in small vials, in order that there could be 
no question concerning the identity of the particular host egg from 
which any particular parasite issued. 
Long before this work was completed the necessity for all the care 
that was being expended to secure accurate results was made mani- 
fest by the emergence of no less than three species of parasites from 
isolated or partially isolated eggs. The first of these to appear was a 
species of Pachyneuron (determined by the senior author as P. gifuen- 
sis Ashm.), and on account of known habits of other members of the 
genus was-placed as probably secondary. Nevertheless it was given 
an opportunity to prove itself a primary if it would, and the speci- 
mens as they issued were confined in vials with gipsy-moth eggs, 
some of which contained the healthy caterpillars, while others har- 
bored the larve of Anastatus. The Pachyneuron paid not the slightest 
attention to either, but invariably died without attempting ovipo- 
sition. 
The next species to issue was Tyndarichus nave How., and it was 
with considerable surprise that it was recognized as different from 
Schedius. On account of the strong superficial resemblance between 
the two it had been supposed up to that time that they were one 
and the same. 
The third was Perissopterus javensis How., of which a single speci- 
men only was reared. To date this record is unique, and the species 
has previously been reared only from scale insects. 
There was other and pressing work to be done with the parasites 
of the hibernating brown-tail caterpillars, and a realization of the 
difficulties which were likely to attend the prosecution of the egg- 
parasite investigations, thus complicated by the discovery that five 
and possibly more parasites were involved of which only one was 
