This species has no eyes and lacks pigmentation. The body of this species is a striking white, with a thin opaque stripe running from the head down the back but fading near the posterior end of the body. This species has 18 pairs of clawed legs, with the last pair reduced. In the male, the penultimate pair is also smaller than the preceding pair. The soles of the feet feature three pads with the middle pad two or three times as broad as the proximal pad. The claws are a dirty white tipped with brown. Like other velvet worms in the
genus Peripatopsis, this species has three distal papillae on each foot, two anterior and one posterior. The feet are elongated, and the legs are notably longer and more slender than in other species of
Peripatopsis. This species also features longer antennae, another characteristic common among troglobitic species. The other troglobitic species of velvet worm,
S. spelaeus, for example, also lacks pigment, has no eyes, and features legs and antennae that are unusually long. == Phylogeny ==