Exidia glandulosa forms dark sepia to blackish, rubbery-gelatinous
fruit bodies that are top-shaped (like an inverted cone) and around across (sometimes fusing into masses some 20 cm in length). They are firm when fresh, but become lax and distorted with age or in wet weather. The fruit bodies occur singly or in small clusters. The upper, spore-bearing surface is shiny and dotted with small pimples or pegs. The undersurface is smooth and matt at first, but develops a dense covering of small, gelatinous spines. The fruit bodies are attached to the wood at the base. The
spore print is white. When the fruit bodies are dried they can shrink to form a flattened black crust.
Microscopic characters The microscopic characters are typical of the genus
Exidia. The
basidia are ellipsoid, septate, 15–25 by 8–13
μm. The
spores are allantoid (sausage-shaped), with dimensions of 14–19 by 4.5–5.5 μm.
Similar species Exidia glandulosa is frequently confused with
Exidia nigricans. The two are similar, but
E. nigricans produces button-shaped fruit bodies in clusters that quickly become deformed and coalesce, forming an effused, lobed mass that can be or more across. The two species are indistinguishable microscopically, but
DNA research indicates they are distinct. The
ascomycete Bulgaria inquinans forms similar, rubbery-gelatinous, blackish fruit bodies on oak. Their upper surfaces are entirely smooth, however, and they produce copious black (not white) spore prints, often leaving a black stain if wiped with the hand. ==Habitat and distribution==