Collema coniophilum is a small, loosely attached, leaf-like lichen whose individual thalli seldom exceed about 2–3 cm in diameter. The body is made up of several broad, rounded lobes 2–4 mm wide; each lobe becomes markedly thicker towards the tip, where the margin forms a smooth rim roughly a third of a millimetre deep when the thallus is moist. The upper surface is dark olive-green to almost black, at first smooth but soon dotted with low pustules that lengthen into ridges and ultimately form a network of narrow folds, giving the lobe tips a wrinkled look. Throughout the upper surface, coarse, blackish isidia—minute, crumb-like outgrowths 50–200 μm across—develop and often extend right to the growing edge, providing most day-to-day reproduction. The underside is the same dark olive tint, fading toward beige near the centre; true root-like
rhizines are absent, though tiny white hairs may appear in patches. No sexual fruit-bodies (
apothecia) have ever been observed, but pale yellow, flask-shaped
pycnidia up to 0.2 mm wide are occasional and release rod-shaped
conidia about 4.5 × 1.5 μm. Standard chemical
spot tests detect no
lichen products, and
thin-layer chromatography is likewise negative, a feature that helps separate the species from chemically active look-alikes. ==Habitat and distribution==