AbstractWe observed epizootics and behavioral alteration in the arctiid caterpillar Chionarctia nivea after infection by an entomopathogenic fungus, Entomophaga aulicae, in April at a riverbank in Kyoto Prefecture, central Japan. The density of arctiid cadavers infected with E. aulicae was 1.31 individuals/m2. The critically ill caterpillars crawled up the dead stems of grasses and herbs such as the common reed Phragmites communis and the Japanese mugwort Artemisia indica var. maximowiczii to die at and near the highest parts of the stems, while the healthy larvae usually wandered on the ground and fed on the leaves of small herbs. This behavioral difference could be caused by infection with E. aulicae to enhance dispersal of conidia by active discharge in Entomophthorales with the aid of wind and rainfall.