The thallus of
Bryocaulon grows as a
fruticose (shrub-like) tuft that may stand upright, dangle from twigs, or sprawl across the
substrate. Its branches are mostly cylindrical, though some flatten slightly, and they range in colour from pale greenish-yellow through olive to almost blackish brown as they age or dry. A thin outer skin () is built from tightly packed, angular fungal cells—a so-called —and is peppered with conspicuous whitish
pseudocyphellae, tiny breaks in the that facilitate
gas exchange. The internal alga belongs to the
Trebouxia group. Chemical
spot tests and
thin-layer chromatography reveal the presence of
olivetoric and
physodic acids. Sexual
fruiting bodies are
apothecia that sit sparsely on the branches and share the branch colour. They are in form: a narrow rim of thallus tissue (the ) surrounds the but quickly thins so that the fertile surface appears flush with the cortex. Each club-shaped
ascus conforms to the
Lecanora model and usually contains eight smooth, colourless, single-celled
ascospores that are
ellipsoid in outline.
Asexual reproduction occurs in scattered, sunken
pycnidia; these flask-shaped cavities release minute
conidia that are faintly dumbbell shaped with pointed ends. ==Habitat and distribution==