Pseudicius squamatus

It has a dark brown carapace that has three narrow white stripes of hairs running down it and a pattern of a streak that terminates in a series of chevrons on the abdomen.

Pseudicius squamatus is a jumping spider that was first described by Charles Haddad and Wanda Wesołowska in 2013.

[2] The genus name is related to two Greek words that can be translated false and honest.

[9] The species name is based on a Latin word that refers to the scale-like hairs on the male palpal bulb.

[10] It has a flat oval, dark brown carapace with three narrow stripes of white hairs that run from the front to back.

It has a black eye field with long brown bristles and a low clypeus with a covering of whie hairs.

[10] It is dark, brownish-grey and has a pattern of a streak down the middle which divides towards the rear into a series of chevrons, looking not dissimilar to the tributaries of a river delta.

It is most easily identified by the presence of black scales on the side of the cymbium near to the tip of the long whip-like embolus.

[11] Internally, the seminal ducts are quite wide and loop round to bean-shaped spermathecae.