The
thallus of
Bactrospora flavopruinosa is mostly immersed in the outer surface of the wood, and shows up only as a thin whitish patch with scattered yellow dots from its algal partner. In cross-section the thallus is very thin (about 20
μm) and (made largely of algal cells), with only a few short, colourless fungal
hyphae reaching the surface. Some areas are exposed while others are still covered by a thin film of the wood, giving a
mottled look under magnification. The is
Trentepohlia-like, forming branched filaments of broadly spindle-shaped, rough-walled cells about 11–18 × 7–9 μm. The
apothecia are sessile, round to slightly top-shaped, 0.3–0.8 mm across and about 0.2 mm tall. Their discs are flat and coated in a bright lemon-yellow, powdery
pruina; the margin is also pruinose, but looks glossy black where the coating has rubbed off, and is often toothed. Microscopically, the hymenium is clear and colourless, 100–150 μm tall, and iodine-positive; above it, the epihymenium contains bright yellow crystals that turn ochraceous in section after treatment with
potassium hydroxide solution (
K). The
asci are cylindrical (60–75 × 6–8 μm) and each contains eight long, colourless
ascospores with 9–15
septa; the spores are 45–55 × 1.5–2.5 μm, straight to slightly curved, and do not break apart.
Pycnidia have not been observed. In K, the yellow pruina releases a yellow solution and briefly forms sulphur-yellow, needle-like crystals before dissolving again. Based on this reaction, the authors suggested the pruina may contain
naphthopyran compounds such as
simonyellin or
protosimonyellin.
Similar species In a global
identification key to
Bactrospora,
B. flavopruinosa keys out by its yellow-pruinose apothecia together with narrow ascospores. Several other
Bactrospora species have similarly thread-like () ascospores of the
patellarioides type and an iodine-positive (amyloid) excipulum, including
B. patellarioides,
B. brodoi,
B. carneopallida,
B. cascadensis, and
B. mesospora. However, none of these combines such narrow
ascospores with lemon-yellow,
pruinose apothecia. On Bermuda,
B. flavopruinosa occurs in the same habitats as
B. myriadea and
B. denticulata, but those species have black, non-pruinose apothecia and a non-amyloid excipulum.
B. denticulata also has longer ascospores (over 70 μm) and strongly toothed (denticulate) apothecial margins, so
B. flavopruinosa can be separated both in the field and under the microscope. Unlike some yellow pruina-producing members of the genus, the yellow pruina in
B. flavopruinosa does not turn reddish-magenta in the
K reaction. ==Habitat and distribution==