Observations on the biology of Afrotropical Hesperiidae (Lepidoptera). Part 7. Hesperiinae incertae sedis: grass and bamboo feeders Cock, Matthew J. W. Congdon, T. Colin E. Zootaxa 2014 3872 4 301 354 4DJDQ Holland, 1896 Holland 1896 [151,540,1648,1674] Insecta Hesperiidae Pardaleodes Animalia Lepidoptera 15 316 Arthropoda species bule  The shelters are made by rolling an individual leaf downwards from the edges to make a tube. Two typeshave been observed. In one, the distal part of the leaf is missing and the penultimate instar caterpillar (91/66) rests in the upward directed basal part of the leaf (Figure 13.1) In the other, cuts from each margin to the midrib allow the distal part of the leaf to droop containing the final instar caterpillar (91/45A, Figure 13.2). In both cases, feeding is distal to the shelter. Insufficient material has been examined to be confident, but we suggest that the first represents the normal leaf shelter, whereas the second represents the preparation of a pupal shelter.   FIGURE 14.Penultimate instar caterpillar of  Pardaleodes bule, collected 21 Sep 1991on  Setaria megaphylla, Kakamega Forest, Kenya; photographed 21 Sep; moulted to final instar, 24 Sep; 16mm; 91/66. 1, dorsolateral view; 2, dorsolateral view of head and anterior body.   FIGURE 15.Final instar caterpillar of  Pardaleodes bule, Kakamega Forest, Kenya. 1, collected on  Setaria megaphylla21 Sep 1991, photographed 21 Sep; pupated 8 Oct; 15mm; 91/65; 2, collected on  S. sulcata, 26 Feb 1988; moulted to final instar 29 Feb; photographed 6 Mar; pupated 15 Mar; died; 22mm; 88/15; 3–4, mature fifth instar caterpillar with developed wax glands, collected on  Setariasp., 18 Jun 1990; photographed 18 Jun; prepupa 20 Jun; died at pupation; 28mm; 91/45A: 3, anterodorsolateral view; 2, detail of head, anterodorsolateral view.  Caterpillar Penultimate and final instar caterpillars have been collected. Penultimate instar shortly before moult (91/66, Figure 14) 16mm; head 1.8 x 2.0mm wide x high (n=2); oval, but wider towards base; indent at vertex; shiny, rugose, uniformly light brown; body translucent dark green; dorsal line darker; anal plate rounded with scattered weak, pale setae. The final instar ( Figure 15) is similar to the penultimate instar, but the posterior margin of the head may be darker, and the body is whitish subdorsally; wax glands develop ventrally on A1–A8, continuous except on legs, but present laterally to legs; head 2.5 x 3.0mm wide x high (n=2, 4). Figure 15.3–4 shows a final instar caterpillar when ready to pupate; the edge of the wax glands is visible along the body. The light brown head distinguishes this species from  P. tibulluswhich follows, in which the head is darker. The final instar takes 15–19 days.  Pupa Pupation takes place in a shelter made by rolling a whole leaf or part of a leaf downwards. The pupa is protected by a wall of loose wax-covered flocculence surrounding it, although no wax is formed directly on the pupa. Pupation seems to be a tricky task for this species as several reared caterpillars got the caterpillar head capsule stuck on the pupa, leading to death. The pupa is noticeably weakly chitinized; the proboscis extending to the cremaster; cylindrical, rounded; whitish, turning light brown; T1 spiracles light brown; front of head, anterior and posterior parts of eyes, and all the dorsal regions with long, light brown, erect setae; cremaster long and pointed. The pupal period lasted 27–29 days under Nairobi conditions.