P. hermaphrodita is
unsegmented,
vermiform, bilateral symmetrical
pseudocoelomate. The body dimensions and structure of
P. hermaphrodita is comparable to
C. elegans' with a body length 1.3 - 1.7mm long and an estimated circumference of 0.180mm. The primary structures are the
Rhabditida-specific mouth, the
pharynx, the intestine, the reproductive system (uterus, spermatheca, gonads) and the cuticle. Like all
nematodes, it has four muscle bands that span the length of the body and has no devoted respiratory or circulatory system.
P. hermaphrodita has four larval stages before becoming a fully reproductive hermaphroditic adult female. Males do exist in this species, but are very rare with Maupas only able to find 21 males among 15,000 individuals (0.14% of the population). Third-stage dauer larvae are produced in unfavourable conditions such as low food levels, high population density or high temperatures. Dauer larvae have constricted pharynx, double the thickness of a normal cuticle and increase of lipid droplets in their cytoplasm. However, the most important aspect of the dauer stage is its ability to serve as the infective stage that seeks out new hosts, once the previous bacterial food source has been depleted. Dauers do not require a food source and can survive up to eight times longer than the original life span of a non-dauer nematode. and
P. tawfiki. However,
P. neopapillosa is a gonochoristic species with an equal number of males and females. == Biological control of slugs ==