The colonies of
M. gypseum are described as cottony or powdery, they grow rapidly with a colour range of white to buff, with a reserve that can range from pink, to red, to yellow (cinnamon); they may occasionally have overtones of violet. The powdery appearance of the colony is due to the abundant production of
macroconidia on the older mycelium, while the edges of the colony are described as scalloped to ragged and can exhibit
pleomorphism.
Macroconidia of
M. gypseum have a substantial range that can occur as short pedicels, terminal, solitary, spindle shaped, large, thick walled, that are smooth or roughened, borne directly on
hyphae or on short branches. They are often very large (e.g., 40–150 x 8–15 μm),
ellipsoid to
fusiform, moderately thick, have
verrucose and are 4–6
septate. The
macroconidia also possess a rat-like tail at the edges of the
conidia. The
ascoma of the fungus is a globose, appendaged gymnothecium that is pale buff in colour and 500–1250 μm in diameter. The peridial
hyphae are hyaline, pale buff, septate, and are branched with thinly but have densely verrucose walls.
Microconidia are drop shaped, clavate, (1.7–3.5 x 3.3–8.3 μm), unicellular, smooth-walled or can be slightly roughened and are created laterally on the
hyphae. The abundance of
microconidia is characteristic of the fungus. The
hyphae or appendages are of three kinds in the fungi, the first being straight, slender, smooth walled
hyphae that can grow up to 250 μm long; they taper at 2.5–4.0 μm in diameter at the base but close to about 1.5-2 μm. The second are slender, smooth-walled, septate, spiral
hyphae that are rarely branched, which have a base diameter of 2.5–3.5 μm that taper up to 1.5-2 μm in diameter. They are usually variable in their coiled state, ranging from tightly to loosely coiled with numerous but variable numbers of turns. The third are thick-walled, verruculose, ellipsoid or fusiform
macroconidia, that are 35–55 x 10–13.5 μm, with up to five septa. The
asci of the fungus are subglobose, thin-walled, evanescent, which are 5-7 μm in diameter and contain a total of eight
ascospores. The ascospores are smooth-walled, lenticular, 1.5–2 x 2.5–4 μm in diameter, and when in mass are yellow. Additionally, the spiral hyphal appendages that ornament the ascomata are often produced spontaneously in culture in the absence of gymnothecia. The fungus does not have any specific nutritional requirements for growth. The teleomorphic features of the microsporum on colonial and microscopic features are often done on Takashio's Medium. However, distinguishing is best done by mating (+/–) or by genetics. The species is
heterothallic, and a such mating is controlled by a 1-locus, 2-allele compatibility system. Comparatively
A. gypseum produces more spreading and a coarser granular colony; the
macroconidia also are wider and the surface colour is brighter and redder than
A. incurvatum. Colonies of
A. incurvatum are pale buff in colour and finely granular, occasionally with a reddish to yellow reverse. ==Ecology==