Auriculora is characterised by a
crustose, -lacking
thallus containing
green algae of the genus
Protococcus. The thallus is to and may be fringed by a well-developed filamentous . It shows distinct zonation, with a byssoid basal layer of loosely interwoven, thick-walled
hyphae and a more compact upper layer enclosing the . The thallus occasionally develops two separate algal layers. The
ascomata (fruiting bodies) are rounded, thinly marginate or unmarginate, with black, non-pruinose covered by a hyphose layer. This layer eventually peels away, leaving an that resembles an ear-shaped structure, which inspired the genus name. The
pycnidia are patelliform (shaped like a small, shallow dish) and semi-, with a dark olive-brown wall that does not react to KOH. The conidiophores are simple or slightly branched, producing rod-like conidia that measure about 10
μm in length. The
asci are club-shaped (), long-cylindrical, eight-spored, and similar in structure to those found in the family
Lecanoraceae. The outer wall layer and apical ring of the asci are strongly amyloid. are
hyaline, , and transversely three-
septate.
Paraphyses are simple (unbranched), septate, approximately 2 μm thick, and only slightly or not at all thickened at their tips. The is dark brown, and the is composed of radiating, cartilage-like
hyphae with an ochre hue. Chemical analysis of
A. byssomorpha reveals a complex
secondary metabolite profile.
Thin-layer chromatography studies have identified five distinct compounds: two uncharacterised substances and three
triterpenes. These compounds manifest as brown crystals that accumulate on the hyphal walls throughout both the thallus and generative tissues, contributing to the lichen's characteristic dark pigmentation. The crystals are particularly dense in the upper thallus layer, though absent from the bright rim where hyphae are adglutinated at the surface. ==Development==