The
thallus of
Diorygma cameroonense is corticolous, greenish-grey, and can reach up to in diameter. It has a smooth to uneven surface and is 100–125
μm thick. The lichen's
fruit bodies are in the form of , which are single, unbranched or stellately to irregularly branched, and immersed to with a thick, complete . Ascospores are
ellipsoid and somewhat , measuring 15–20 by 5–8 μm, with 3–5 transverse and 0–1 longitudinal
septa in 1 or 2 segments. The lichen contains three
lichen products:
stictic acid (major),
menegazziaic acid (minor), and
constictic acid (submajor).
Similar species Diorygma cameroonense is part of the genus
Diorygma, which includes other species with small ascospores, such as
D. microsporum from Brazil, Colombia, and the United States (Florida);
D. pauciseptatum from Brazil; and
D. sticticum from Thailand.
Diorygma cameroonense is distinguished from these species by its larger and more septate ascospores, as well as its unique chemistry. ==Habitat and distribution==