Lepidurus cryptus grows to a length of about as adults, measured from the tip of the
carapace (body shell) to the tip of the caudal lamina. Its color is highly variable, and can be a very translucent yellow, light or dark green, light or dark brown, and even black, with additional mottling found in many more colors. Like other
Lepidurus species,
L. cryptus has between 24 and 29 body rings and 30–35 pairs of legs. These legs have at least 5 inward-facing projections called
endites, the last 3 of which extend past the edge of the carapace. A line that runs between the tops of the eyes is intersected by the
nuchal organ, a light-sensitive organ that is formed from the embryonic (
naupliar) eye. The posterior end of the carapace, called the sulcus, is covered in triangular spines. As adults, these spines are about the same relative length and width. However, smaller individuals may have spines that are 1.2–1.5 times as long as they are wide, and old individuals may have rounded spines instead. Each spine is separated by a gap of about 2 spine lengths. Each gap contains many smaller spines that have a more variable shape. The presence of these smaller spines distinguish the species from its relative
Lepidurus couesii. The caudal lamina (supra-anal plate), a structure at the base of the tail, is truncate and is between 0.1 and 0.3 times the length of the carapace. This species is indistinguishable from
Lepidurus packardi based on its visible features alone, and was originally described based on DNA sequences and
allozyme analyses. == Ecology and habitat ==