The genus
Psoroma is characterised by its small scale-like
thallus, with an underlying layer that is barely noticeable. It houses a green algal , possibly the algae
Myrmecia, which collaborates with the fungus to perform
photosynthesis.
Psoroma species have
cephalodia, structures containing the cyanobacterium
Nostoc. The reproductive organs, known as
ascomata, are apothecial in form—essentially sessile and somewhat cup-shaped with a raised, enduring edge. Within these structures, the supporting filaments, or
paraphyses, may be simple or branch towards their tips, which do not expand or form a cap, staining a dusky blue when
iodine is applied. The spore-producing asci are elongated, either club-shaped or cylindrical, featuring a distinctive structure at their tips where a central tube
stains blue with iodine within a lighter-staining area, surrounded by a clear
amyloid ring.
Spores produced by
Psoroma are single-celled, colourless, and often contain one or two large oil droplets. Their shape is
ellipsoidal, with a surface that is warty or ridged, and somewhat pointed at the ends. For asexual reproduction,
Psoroma develops
pycnidia, which are pale brown, and produces simple, rod-shaped, colourless
conidia. Chemically,
Psoroma usually lacks detectable
secondary metabolites (
lichen products) through
thin-layer chromatography, although in rare cases,
porphyrilic acid and related compounds may be present. ==Species==