The family Sphaerophoraceae includes species with varied
growth forms. Many grow in a shrub-like (fruticose) manner, either upright or spreading across surfaces, while others form scale-like, shield-shaped, or crusty growths on their substrate. In fruticose species, branches are usually rounded or slightly flattened and tend to be brittle. Some species produce specialised reproductive branches. The reproductive anatomy varies among genera. Mazaedia-producing genera like
Sphaerophorus and
Bunodophoron begin reproductive development with the formation of a globose, plasma-rich primordium beneath the thallus cortex. This primordium differentiates into multiple zones, including a strongly pigmented pseudoparenchymatic base, an upper zone of ascogenous hyphae, and a developing hymenium. Together, these layers form the boundary tissue, a diagnostic feature of the family that separates vegetative and generative tissues while supporting reproduction. A distinctive feature of this anatomy is the 'watch-glass-like' boundary tissue at the base of mature apothecia. This characteristic is especially prominent in
Leifidium tenerum, where the tissue develops early, forming a lens-like structure that supports the hymenium during spore dispersal. In these genera, mazaedia (powdery spore masses) develop when the upper apothecial wall disintegrates, exposing the hymenium and enabling passive spore dispersal. Reproductive anatomy varies in non-mazaedia-producing genera such as
Austropeltum and
Neophyllis. While
Neophyllis retains some similarities to mazaedia-producing genera, including the formation of a pigmented boundary tissue,
Austropeltum develops simpler apothecia that lack the generative tissue-derived layer found in other members of the family. These anatomical differences show variation in reproductive structures within the family. The (outer layer) ranges from 45–200
μm thick and is composed of thick-walled, gelatinised, fused hyphae covered by a thin . The
medulla (inner layer) can be dense, lax, or hollow, depending on the species. Some species show a distinctive violet-blue reaction with
iodine, a trait that can aid in identification. '' Species in Sphaerophoraceae are
lichens with green-algal () . Their reproductive structures (
ascomata) are
apothecia. In the shrub-like genera, these develop into distinctive sooty-black, powder-filled structures () typically found at branch tips, though in some cases they are located on the underside of fertile branches. In some species, these structures may be elevated on stalks, while in crustose forms they sit directly on the surface. Some species of
Bunodophoron, such as
B. macrocarpum and
B. scrobiculatum, have been interpreted as having a thallus, where flattened thalli bear apothecia on marginal branches that are somewhat and variably developed. The apothecia may be surrounded by tissue derived from the main body of the lichen (the
thallus), forming irregular flaps in some species. This surrounding tissue may persist, be lost early in development, or be absent entirely. The spore-producing layer within these structures either breaks down in species with mazaedia or, in crusty forms, contains tightly packed, thread-like structures (
paraphyses) that may branch near their tips. The spores are produced in cylindrical sacs (
asci) containing eight spores each. Prototunicate asci in Sphaerophoraceae are interpreted as derived by reduction relative to bitunicate/tubular forms in other Lecanorales. Some authors have suggested an association between reduction to prototunicate asci and the development of boundary tissue in mazaediate genera, but functional implications remain inferential. Spores can be single-celled or two-celled, and vary in shape from spherical and elliptical to teardrop-shaped. While colourless in their early stages, the spores of some species darken with age. The spore surface may be smooth or decorated with irregular patterns or granules. The spore ornamentation process differs between genera. In some species, the ornamentation material is deposited on the spore wall inside the asci, while in others it forms from an amorphous substance that adheres to the wall after the spores are released. The ornamentation appears greenish in
potassium hydroxide (KOH) solution and reddish in
nitric acid. Reproductive structure development (
ontogeny) can be angiocarpic, where the excipulum encloses the hymenium until the mazaedium forms, or hemiangiocarpic, where the mazaedium is exposed earlier. The
paraphyses are typically carbonised in most species, a distinguishing feature of the family. The family also produces asexual reproductive structures (
pycnidia) that generate small spores (
conidia). In shrub-like forms, these develop at branch tips and along their lower surfaces, whilst in crusty species they are embedded within the thallus. The conidia vary in shape from thread-like to rod-shaped or elliptical. The conidiophores in Sphaerophoraceae are similar to Vobis's type VI, having branched and anastomosing conidiophores with conidia produced terminally and intercalarily on thin extensions of the conidiogenous cells, a pattern found in many other lecanoralean lichens.
Boundary tissue The boundary tissue in Sphaerophoraceae, found in all members of the family, separates generative (ascomatal) and vegetative (thalline) tissues. It has been proposed as a
synapomorphy uniting the group. In mazaedia-producing genera such as
Sphaerophorus,
Bunodophoron, and
Leifidium, the boundary tissue comprises two distinct layers: an upper zone of aggregated ascogenous hyphae and a lower pseudoparenchymatic zone derived from generative tissue. The pseudoparenchymatic layer is usually strongly pigmented, creating a distinct boundary between the thallus and reproductive structures. '' By contrast, non-mazaedia-producing genera such as
Austropeltum and
Neophyllis have simpler boundary tissues.
Neophyllis exhibits a two-layered boundary tissue similar to mazaedia-producing genera, but with weaker pigmentation, while
Austropeltum lacks the generative tissue-derived layer entirely. Despite these variations, the shared developmental origins of the boundary tissue support its homology across the family. Studies of
Leifidium tenerum provide insights into boundary tissue formation. Initially, the ascoma develops as a globose primordium of plasma-rich ascogenous hyphae beneath the thallus cortex. During maturation, the tissue differentiates into a 'watch-glass-like' structure, a characteristic of the family. Similar processes occur in
Bunodophoron and
Sphaerophorus, though these genera show greater variation in pigmentation and cellular arrangement. Comparisons with other lichen families highlight the distinctiveness of the Sphaerophoraceae boundary tissue. In
Pilophorus, for example, boundary tissue forms from generative hyphae that grow inward from the ascoma margin, differing from the aggregated ascogenous hyphae seen in Sphaerophoraceae. This developmental difference aligns with molecular data that place
Pilophorus in Cladoniaceae rather than Sphaerophoraceae. Boundary tissue structure differs among genera; mazaediate taxa have a well-developed pseudoparenchymatic layer, whereas
Austropeltum and
Neophyllis have simpler forms. ==Chemistry==