Chroodiscus forms a thin, smooth to slightly glossy crust (
thallus) that grows directly on living leaves (foliicolous) and lacks a true . Its
ascomata are strikingly : minute discs that split into several triangular lobules which then curl back to give a star-shaped outline; the exposed centre ranges from grey to scarlet-red, according to pigment chemistry. A pale, borders each disc, while the clear
hymenium contains lax, branched
paraphyses and no . The
asci are
Thelotrema-type (thin-walled, iodine-negative) and usually release eight hyaline
ascospores that are transversely 3–7-septate, thin-walled and non-
amyloid (about 12–30 × 4–7
μm). Many species synthesise orange-red
anthraquinones or
stictic acid-derivatives that tint the discs; others are chemically inert. Species differ mainly in disc colour, spore size and chemistry: for example,
C. argillaceus has grey discs and stictic acid, whereas
C. mirificus develops vivid red discs rich in anthraquinones. The combination of star-shaped discs, absence of periphysoids and thin-walled, non-amyloid spores separates
Chroodiscus from superficially similar genera such as
Chapsa,
Astrochapsa and
Pseudochapsa, whose discs lack the lobules or whose spores react differently with iodine. ==Ecology==