The
thallus (lichen body) is extremely reduced, consisting of scattered or small clusters of granules that are pale greenish to whitish and about 0.05–0.4 mm across. These granules develop on the thallus of
Placopyrenium breussii and often contain one to three developing
apothecia (the -like
fruiting bodies). Apothecia are usually few and measure about 0.4–1.1 mm across. They begin immersed in the granules but soon break through and become in form (with a thallus-like rim). The disc is pale greenish-brown and may become greyish or brownish with age, while the thick, white is about 0.1–0.25 mm wide and typically dull rather than glossy. Microscopically, the
asci are 8-spored, and the spores are colourless, single-celled, and
ellipsoid, typically (7)8–10(12) × 5–6(6.5) μm, often with one or two oil droplets.
Pycnidia are rare. When present, they produce thread-like
conidia about 19.5–29 × 1 μm. In
spot tests, the thallus cortex is K+ (yellow), C−, KC+ (yellow), and P− or weakly P+; in some apothecia the shows an N+ reaction, turning deep blue and then purple.
Thin-layer chromatography detected
usnic acid as the major
secondary metabolite, with stictic,
cryptostictic, and
constictic acids in smaller amounts. ==Habitat and distribution==