Schendylops demelloi

[5] These specimens were found in the Atlantic Forest, in the municipality of Iguape in the state of São Paulo in Brazil.

[5][6] Both the female lectotype and the male type specimen are deposited in the Zoologische Staatssammlung in Munich.

In 1997, the zoologists Richard L. Hoffman and Luis A. Pereira deemed Schendylurus to be a junior synonym of Schendylops.

When preserved in alcohol, adults have yellow bodies with a darker reddish brown head.

The antennae are typically about 2.4 times longer than the cephalic plate and become more slender toward the distal ends.

[2][4][5][8] The sternum of the first maxillae is endowed with an unusually large number of setae in the adults of this species.

The basal element of each of the ultimate legs features two pores on the membrane covered by the corresponding sternite.

For example, the claws of the second maxillae are pectinate on both the ventral and dorsal margins, and the sternites feature pore-fields.

Furthermore, in all three species, the first article of each antenna is wider than long, the dentate lamella on the mandibles is divided into three distinct blocks, and the pretergite of the ultimate leg-bearing segment is contiguous with intercalary pleurites.