It can be best differentiated by its copulatory organs, particularly the shape of the male tibial apo[apophyses, or appendages and the arrangement of pocket and openings on the female epigyne.
[4][5] Indeed, Ekaterina Andreeva, Stefania Hęciak and Jerzy Prószyński looked to combine the genera in 1984.
[6] The two genera have similar spermathecal structure but work by Wayne Maddison in 1987 demonstrated that they have very different DNA.
Oval and distinctively flattened, it is dark brown with a covering of thin colourless hairs.
[12] The copulatory openings and large accessory glands lead to long twisted insemination ducts and narrow spermathecae.
The spider has an ovoid palpal bulb with a large lump at the bottom and a thin curved embolus.
The male is also similar to that species, differing in the shape of one of the tibial apophyses, and the presence of a larger lump towards the bottom of the appendage.
[14] The longer tibial apophysis also differentiates the male from the otherwise similar Afraflacilla karinae, while the female has its epigynal openings and pockets in a different arrangement.
[16] Pseudicius gracilis creates silk retreats in the thorns of Vachellia erioloba trees.
Haddad and Wesołowska note that the spiders can feast on the ants by attacking through the holes that are created by these hollowing actions.
[1] The holotype was found in Sandveld Nature Reserve in Free State, South Africa, during 2003.