The thallus forms a thin (60–100 μm), pale grey to olive-grey crust that adheres closely to bark. Its surface is uneven to faintly warty and lacks powdery or finger-like
propagules. A poorly developed only 5–10 μm thick overlies a 30–40 μm algal layer composed of green
Trebouxia-type cells; below this, the
medulla is sparse. Apothecia are abundant, appearing as flexuous, often branched slits (lirellae) 1–4 mm long that begin immersed but later burst open and rise slightly above the thallus. Their discs are thickly dusted with a white powder (), and ageing fruit-bodies frequently crack along the disc surface. The lateral wall () remains pale or only weakly brown and is largely uncarbonised except at the base. The spore-bearing
hymenium, 100–180 μm tall, is
iodine-positive (bluish violet), and its cap () is well developed, consisting of tangled paraphysis tips rich in gelatinous walls.
Paraphyses are 1–2 μm wide, repeatedly branch and re-join, and tend to stick together near the
ascus tips. Each club-shaped ascus produces eight colourless to pale-brown, densely muriform
ascospores with 10–14 transverse and 3–4 longitudinal walls; a thin gelatinous surrounds each spore. No asexual
pycnidia have been observed. Chemically, the lichen contains
stictic acid as a major metabolite together with minor or trace amounts of
constictic,
hypostictic, and
hypoconstictic acids, and it shows no colour reactions in standard
spot tests. ==Habitat and distribution==