The fruit bodies are irregularly
top-shaped to roughly spherical, measuring wide and high. It has a two-layered
peridium. The outer layer of the peridium (the exoperidium) is thick and leathery (except where it thins toward the base), measuring thick. It is divided into irregular three- to six-sided, low pyramids that are usually blunt, but sometimes pointed. The pyramids are thick. They have parallel markings, a feature Morse attributed to the differences in growth rate caused by variations in daytime and nighttime temperatures. The pyramid centers have short brownish hairs. The pyramids cover the entire peridium except for near the base, where it is smooth. Warts on the surface of young fruit bodies may be disproportionately thick. The inner peridium is a thin shiny tissue that is depressed into areas demarcated by the pyramidal plates. The puffball base, which occupies about a third to a quarter of the bottom of the fruit body, consists of moderately-sized chambers that persist even after the
gleba has matured and the
spores have dispersed. The base can assume a purplish hue after weathering. The base is rooted into the soil with
rhizomorphs. Initially white, the gleba turns color from yellow to golden brown to dark brown as the spores mature. As the gleba dries, the inner peridium dries and cracks, exposing the spore mass in cracks between the scales. The gleba is supported by a yellowish-brown to light brown subgleba. The flesh has no odor and a mild taste. The
spore print is white, turning brownish. The spherical spores measure 3–5
μm, including an outer covering (an
epispore) of about 0.5 μm. Their surface texture ranges from smooth to faintly warted. They have an oil droplet and a translucent pedicel (a small stalk) up to 2.5 μm long. The
basidia (spore-bearing cells) are club-shaped, four-spored, and measure 10–12.5 μm long by 5–7.5 μm wide. The capillitium comprises short, highly branched (resembling
antlers) and entangled threads measuring 5–10 μm wide with walls up to 2.5 μm thick. The capillitial threads do not have
septa.
Similar species In the field,
Calbovista puffballs are sometimes difficult to reliably distinguish from
Calvatia sculpta. Although the latter species has prominent pyramidal warts, some specimens of
Calbovista (especially young ones) may share this feature and the distinction between them becomes blurred. Microscopic differences can be used to tell the two species apart:
Calvatia puffballs do not have a highly branched and entangled capillitium. Another lookalike,
Mycenastrum corium, has a smooth peridium, a reduced or absent base, tends to split open in maturity into irregularly shaped sections, and has spiny capillitial threads.
Calvatia subcretacea, also found in high elevations under
conifers in western North America, has smaller fruit bodies, measuring up to high and wide. It has small pointed warts with gray tips.
Calvatia booniana is a large puffball—up to in diameter—found in open pastures and grassy areas of the western U.S. that has flat polygonal scales on the outer peridium. In addition to its larger size, it differs from
Calbovista in that it lacks a sterile base and its capillitia are less branched and have septa. ==Habitat and distribution==