Trite guilberti is a small spider with a body divided into two main parts: an oval forward section, or
cephalothorax and, behind that, an egg-shaped
abdomen. Only the male has been identified. It has a cephalothorax that is typically long and wide. Its
carapace, the hard upper part of the cephalothorax, is brown, covered in white hairs and has a pattern of faint lines radiating from a central hard patch, or
fovea. There is also a fringe of orange hairs at the front of the carapace and white hairs on its side. Its
eyes are surrounded with a dark brown area. The underside of its cephalothorax, or
sternum, is light brown. Its
chelicerae are brown and slender with a bobbly surface while its fang has an appendage that has an unusual shape. There is a single tooth to the front and another to the back, the latter with between four and five
cusps. Its other mouthparts, its
labium and
maxillae are also brown, its maxillae being marked with an unusual appendage. The spider's face, or
clypeus, is narrow, brown and covered in white hairs. The male has a abdomen that is smaller and narrower than its carapace, typically measuring long and wide. The top of its abdomen is brown with a pattern of white stripes that run from the front to the back on its back and running along its sides. The bottom of its abdomen is greyish. The spider has light brown
spinnerets. Its front
legs are generally brown while its remaining legs are lighter brown; there are spines on the front two pairs of legs. The spider has a distinctive copulatory organs with a dorsal spine visible on its light brown
pedipalps and a short hooked tibial
apophysis, a protrusion on its short light brown palpal tibia. The male has a thin and hairy
cymbium that is longer and wider than the
palpal bulb. The palpal bulb includes a long thin
tegulum that contains a hook-shaped semination duct. Its long thin
embolus extends from the bottom of the tegulum and, after initially passing outside the cymbium, curves around until it passes over the tegulum. Despite its length, it does not pass outside the top of the cymbium. It is the spider's copulatory organs that most help identify it, particularly the shape of its embolus and the path it takes. The female has not been described. ==Distribution and habitat==