The
thallus is mainly embedded in the outer bark (), grey-white to pale
fawn, and forms circular to elliptic patches at least 6×3 cm, each bounded by a dark brown hypothalline line. In microscopic preparations the
hyphae stain blue with iodine. Standard
spot tests on the thallus are negative (K−, C−, KC−, PD−, UV−). The apothecia are numerous and often crowded, forming elongated, slit-like structures () that are usually irregularly star-shaped (), only occasionally neatly stellate, and reaching up to 12 mm across in the largest aggregates. The individual "arms" are narrow (about 0.08–0.16 mm wide) and pale to dark reddish-brown, without . Microscopically, the apothecia are 80–130 μm tall. The is reddish-brown and turns olivaceous with
K, while the
hymenium is
hyaline and iodine-positive (I+ blue). The
asci are and eight-spored, with only a minute
amyloid ring at the apex, and the
ascospores are typically 17–24×6–8 μm, 3–4-septate, and macrocephalic (with the upper cell larger than the lower). North American collections have been reported with slightly smaller spores, about 15–22 × 5–7 μm, while retaining the same general spore form and chemistry. Spores are hyaline and smooth when young, but older spores develop brown, granular warting.
Pycnidia have not been observed. The species is lichenized with the green alga
Trentepohlia as its photobiont. Chemically, the diagnostic feature is
gyrophoric acid confined to the apothecia, detectable as a C+ (red) reaction in apothecial sections. ==Habitat and distribution==