Schizomids are relatively small, soft-bodied arachnids, somewhat similar in appearance to
whip scorpions. The
prosoma (cephalothorax) is divided into three regions, each covered by plates, the large
protopeltidium and the smaller, paired,
mesopeltidia and
metapeltidia. The name means "split or cleaved middle", referring to the way the prosoma is divided into two separate plates. The
opisthosoma (abdomen) is a smooth oval of 12 recognizable segments. The first is reduced and forms the
pedicel, while the last three are constricted, forming the
pygidium. The last segment bears a short whip-like tail or
flagellum, consisting of no more than four segments. The females generally have three- or four-segmented flagella, while in males it is single segmented. Like the related orders
Uropygi and
Amblypygi, and the more distantly related
Solifugae, the schizomids use only six legs for walking, having modified their first two legs to serve as sensory organs. They also have large well-developed pincer-like
pedipalps just before the sensory legs. The hind legs are modified for jumping, as part of their escape response when threatened. Schizomids have no actual eyes, but a few species have vestigial eyespots capable of telling light from dark. They breathe through a single pair of
book lungs located on the second abdominal segment, as the second pair on third abdominal segment found in the other orders of
Tetrapulmonata is lost. ==Distribution and habitat==