Euophrys limpopo

The copulatory organs are unique amongst spiders in the genus, particularly the long thin embolus on the palpal bulb of the male.

Euophrys limpopo is a species of jumping spider that was first described by the arachnologists Wanda Wesołowska Galina Azarkina and Anthony Russell-Smith in 2014.

[2] It was one of over 500 species identified by Wesołowska during her career, more than any other contemporary writer and second only to the French archnologist Eugène Simon.

[5] In Wayne Maddison's 2015 study of spider phylogenetic classification, the genus Euophrys was listed to the tribe Euophryini.

[12] Euophrys limpopo is a very small spider with a body divided into two main parts: a broader oval cephalothorax and longer abdomen.

[5] The chelicerae has two teeth to the front and one to the back, while the remainder of the mouthparts, including the labium, are brown, except for small white edging to the maxillae.

The spider's abdomen is oval with its topside dominated by a shiny brown hairless scutum, which is similar to species in the .genus Chalcoscirtus.

[1] The palpal bulb is bulbous with a pronounced bulge to the bottom and a very thin wiry embolus sprouting from near the top.

The palpal tibia is small and has an erect protrusion, or tibial apophysis, that has a slight kink to its end.