The thallus is terrestrial, forming a
foliose rosette up to 7 cm across on soil between
bryophytes or at plant bases. It consists of three to five semicircular , each 1–3 cm long and wide, sparsely branched and lacking obvious radial sutures. Fresh lobes are olive-brown to olive-grey with pale concentric zones; rolled-in () margins bear conspicuous white hairs. When dry the upper surface becomes and broadly , while the lower surface—lacking a (it is )—shows a whitish, felty
medulla. In section the thallus is 350–450
micrometres (μm) thick. A diffusely viaduct-shaped upper cortex (30–50 μm) overlies a 100–150 μm zone of spaced, anticlinal hyphae. Tufts of agglutinated hyphae form stout setae, 200–300 μm long and 30–50 μm broad at the base. The is 100–200 μm thick (orange-brown above, olive-green below). The is
Rhizonema andinum, a filamentous
cyanobacterium in the family
Nostocaceae. The medulla is 70–100 μm thick and emits hyphae 3–5 μm wide. No
clamp connections are present. The hymenophore is : rounded to irregular, sessile depressions 3–5 mm in diameter with cream- to pale orange-brown surfaces and felty, involute margins. Sections show a 200–250 μm thick structure supported by a thickened medullary base; the hymenium contains abundant palisade-like basidioles (40–50 × 5–7 μm) and scattered four-spored
basidia (25–35 × 5–7 μm).
Basidiospores have yet to be observed, and
thin-layer chromatography has detected no
secondary metabolites. ==Habitat and distribution==