Adults of Dinodasys mirabilis were studied for the first time. The specimens, collected from the west coast of Sweden, were investigated alive and with electron microscopy. Sexually mature specimens attain a total length of 450-490 µm; the adhesive apparatus is made up of anterior, lateral, ventrolateral, dorsal and posterior tubes; one pair of 'cirrata' type tubes is also present. The reproductive apparatus is hermaphroditic; paired testes extend rearward from the pharyngeo-intestinal junction to 3/4 of the trunk; sperm ducts bend anteriorly at U52 and join together into a common, midventral pore at U33. Two ovaries lie along the sides of the caudal intestine, extending anteriorly from U68. Frontal organ present on the right side of the body, centred a U70; caudal organ absent; a gland organ surrounding the terminal intestine may be present but its homology with other organs in a similar position is uncertain. The spermatozoon is a filiform cell, formed by a long acrosome, a spring-like nucleus and a flagellum. The acrosome is divided into two regions: the anterior-most is thin and corkscrew-shaped, the posterior one is rectilinear; both regions are delimited by a continuous external layer of thick, dense material, that in longitudinal section appears obliquely striated and surrounds a long pile of stout, electron-dense cylinders; the nucleus contains condensed chromatin and is coiled around an elongate mitochondrion; the flagellum possesses a 9x2 + 2 axoneme devoid of striated cylinder. Within Macrodasyida, U-bend sperm ducts and the peculiar ultrastructure of the acrosome are characteristics shared by other Turbanellidae studied so far, providing a foundation for the current systematization of Dinodasys