The thallus forms a light yellow-olive crust on bark. Its surface is mostly smooth but can develop low, blister-like swellings that give parts of the crust a
gall-forming aspect. A dense outer skin ( cortex) sometimes splits internally, and both the and the pale-yellow medulla contain clusters of
calcium oxalate crystals that sparkle under
polarized light. Standard
spot tests are negative, yet a
potassium hydroxide droplet turns the
medulla yellow, confirming the presence of an otherwise undetected yellow pigment.
Apothecia—small, rounded
fruiting bodies—are immersed in the crust and measure 0.2–0.4 mm across. Each apothecium is roofed by a narrow pore 0.1–0.2 mm wide; its rim is light yellow and the interior surface is flesh-colored and dusted with a fine white frost (). Unlike several others in the genus, the species has no , the sterile pillar that can rise from the apothecial floor in many
Myriotrema. The wall of the apothecium () is built of tightly interwoven fungal threads (
hyphae) and is yellow-brown in section. The spore-bearing layer (
hymenium) is 60–80
micrometres (μm) tall and contains unbranched
paraphyses. Each club-shaped
ascus holds eight ellipsoid
ascospores that are 15–20 × 5–7 μm, divided by three to five internal
cross-walls. The spores
stain violet-blue in iodine (an
amyloid reaction), a common diagnostic feature in this family. ==Habitat and distribution==