This bug is dull black and has fine hairs on the surface. The tegmina of the wing is short and does not extendbeyond the base of the abdomen. The pronotum has spines arising at the base of the wings and another at the tip of the scutellum. The tarsi are paler and the last joint on the mid and hind legs is darker. The abdomen has a velvet-like surface appearance.
Taxonomy
It was described by William Forsell Kirby under the genusFormicoris in the Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society in 1891. Kirby believed that the species belonged in the family Reduviidae. R. C. Wroughton noted that they were frequently found under stones along with colonies of "Polyrhachis spiniger" and that the spine structure varied widely across individuals. A second description under the name of Dulichius wroughtoni was published by Ernst Evald Bergroth but he subsequently discovered that it had already been described by Kirby under a different genus. Bergroth then pointed out that Kirby had incorrectly placed it in the wrong family and noted that it was clearly a member of the already described genus Dulichius in what was then the subfamily Alydinae within the Coreidae.