Buellia frigida is a
crustose lichen (sometimes ) with a variable
thallus size, more or less circular in outline. It has a diameter of up to , although it is often much smaller. The thallus is characterised by a black that extends approximately beyond the older central region of thallus; this black area represents the growth zone. In some instances, neighbouring thalli coalesce to form larger aggregations of up to . Its margin is somewhat , sometimes barely visible, and its older, central thallus has a deeply appearance, giving rise to the impression of radiating marginal . These lobes are further defined by shallower cracks, creating a surface divided into polygonal . The areoles have a somewhat cerebriform (brainlike) texture and can vary in colour from grey to black, with the tips of the marginal lobes typically appearing black. An amorphous layer, approximately 35–40
μm thick, covers the thallus. This layer,
mucilaginous in nature, may appear white when it is dry. The upper of
B. frigida is about 6–7 μm thick. It has a rounded or swollen top () and grows in a dense, upright, and parallel arrangement (). However, it appears as a single layer of dark, thick-walled cells that are equal in diameter in all dimensions (). The within the thallus varies in thickness, containing cells of
Trebouxia measuring between 4–7 μm in diameter. The
medulla, composed of loosely woven, thin-walled
hyphae that are somewhat vertically arranged, also has variability in thickness. The medulla stabilises the thallus structure and helps regulate water retention and gas exchange in the lichen. Beneath the medulla, there is a basal layer, approximately 15 μm thick, of compact dark brown cells that elongate upward and merge with the medullary hyphae. Medullary hyphae also help the thallus adhere tightly to the .
Buellia frigida forms black, slightly shiny apothecia, which are often more or less
sessile on the older areoles. The apothecia start as flat but become convex as they mature. When young, they have a appearance; when mature they are in form, and up to about 1 mm in diameter. The amphithecial cortex is about 15–17 μm thick, formed by a of isodiametric cells. Algae that initially exist between the medullary hyphae disappear as the apothecia age. The medulla of the apothecia consists of vertical brown hyphae that are loosely woven and connected to the thalline medulla. The is not differentiated in older apothecia; instead, the amphithecial cortex darkens, and the medullary hyphae shrink together after the algae disappear, creating the impression of a dimidiate proper margin (i.e. divided into two equal or nearly equal halves). The hypothecium is brownish, with a thickness ranging from 30 to 80 μm in the centre and thinning towards the margin, where it merges with the amphithecial cortex. The
ascus, which contains the
ascospores, stands approximately 90–110 μm tall.
Paraphyses, measuring 2 μm in diameter, darken above the asci and have an internal partition, or
septum. The asci are , with dimensions of 36–46 by 14.5–17 μm, and contain dark brown, bilocular ascospores (divided into two segments by a septum). These ascospores are occasionally only slightly constricted at the septum, and some may remain unilocular. They are typically
ellipsoid, with dimensions of 9–13 by 5–8 μm. Asexual
propagules, such as
isidia or
soredia, are not made by
Buellia frigida. The lichen, however, does create
pycnidia that originate from under the algal layer, appearing (with a rounded or bulbous form with a narrower portion or neck) to irregular and reaching sizes of up to 300 μm in diameter. A thin , consisting of very small-celled , surrounds the pycnidia. have a few septa and are branched at the base, measuring approximately 10 by 1 μm. The terminal are ellipsoid, measuring about 4 by 1 μm in size.
Similar species Buellia subfrigida, described in 1993 and found in the
Lützow-Holm Bay area and the
Prince Olav Coast of East Antarctica, is closely related to
Buellia frigida. Both species are part of a (a closely related duo differing in key traits), with
B. subfrigida likely evolving from the sexually reproducing
B. frigida through the acquisition of soredia. The species share morphological and chemical traits, forming circular thalli with distinct effigurate lobes at their margins, and have similar chemical profiles. However,
B. subfrigida differs by its sorediate thallus. This adaptation allows
B. subfrigida to grow in habitats that are seasonally inundated with water, a niche where
B. frigida, despite its wide ecological amplitude (the limits of environmental conditions within which an organism can live and function), is rarely observed. ==Habitat, distribution, and ecology==