The
fruiting bodies consist of a stalked, cup- to saucer-shaped
apothecium that often becomes laterally compressed with age, measuring across. The spore-bearing surface, or
hymenium, is smooth and dark greyish-brown to brownish-black, contrasting subtly with the outer receptacle, which is the same colour or slightly paler and is finely downy (pubescent). Supporting the cup is a distinct, hollow
stipe 1.5–6 cm tall and 0.8–2 cm thick, coloured whitish to pale grey. The stipe bears three to six blunt ribs separated by grooves that continue seamlessly onto the base of the cup, giving the entire structure a subtly ribbed appearance. Beneath the hymenium lies the medullary excipulum, a layer of densely interwoven
hyphae (
textura intricata) 3–7
micrometres (μm) wide, forming a firm but flexible tissue. Overlying this is the ectal excipulum, composed of angular (
textura angularis) cells 25–50 × 20–40 μm in size; some of these outer cells produce fascicled tufts of three to six hyphal cells that are cylindrical to club-shaped, 10–26 × 8–14 μm. The spore-bearing
asci are pleurorhynchous—arising from a hooked basal cell—and measure 270–330 × 13–15 μm, each enclosing eight spores. The
ascospores are
ellipsoid, contain a single oil droplet (uniguttulate), and range from 18.2–21.8 μm long by 11.4–13.2 μm wide. Interspersed among the asci are
paraphyses, sterile filaments 3–4 μm wide at the base with brown-walled, granular contents, which swell to 5–8 μm at their club-shaped tips. ==Habitat and distribution==