Oncus planci is known to show
neoteny, which means the juvenile form is retained beyond the usual age of maturation. The neotenous form has a single row of tube feet and is less than an inch long. These individuals were at first mistaken for a separate species which was given the biological name
Ocnus brunneus. The sexes are separate in this species and adults reproduce sexually by
spawning in spring. The fertilised eggs are retained by the female on her tentacles where they develop directly into the adult form without undergoing
metamorphosis. The neotenous form reproduces asexually by transverse
binary fission. ==Distribution and habitat==