Planipapillus is a genus of velvet worms in the family Peripatopsidae, whose species are found in eastern Victoria and southeastern New South Wales, Australia. They are unique in that the males of this genus may bear patches of reduced papillae on the head, posterior to the eyes; the generic name refers to this fact, and likewise they have been vernacularly referred to as lawn-headed onychophorans. All species in this genus are oviparous and have 15 pairs of legs.
Planipapillus is a genus of velvet worms in the family Peripatopsidae, whose species are found in eastern Victoria and southeastern New South Wales, Australia. They are unique in that the males of this genus may bear patches of reduced papillae on the head, posterior to the eyes; the generic name refers to this fact, and likewise they have been vernacularly referred to as lawn-headed onychophorans. All species in this genus are oviparous and have 15 pairs of legs.
== Species == The genus was erected in 1996 by Amanda L. Reid to accommodate four contemporarily described species, of which P. taylori was designated the type species. Reid described and assigned a further eight species to Planipapillus in 2000, and Douch and Reid described an additional species in 2023, producing the count of 13 species recognised today. These species are listed below: Planipapillus absonus Douch & Reid, 2023 Planipapillus annae Reid, 2000 Planipapillus berti Reid, 2000 Planipapillus biacinaces Reid, 1996 Planipapillus biacinoides Reid, 2000 Planipapillus bulgensis Reid, 1996 Planipapillus cyclus Reid, 2000 Planipapillus gracilis Reid, 2000 Planipapillus impacris Reid, 2000 Planipapillus mundus Reid, 1996 Planipapillus taylori Reid, 1996 Planipapillus tectus Reid, 2000 Planipapillus vittatus Reid, 2000
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).