Racoplaca is a genus of
crustose lichens that grow on living leaves (
foliicolous). The lichen forms a thin, distinctive crust beneath the
leaf cuticle, characterised by repeated forking (dichotomous) branches that create a network-like pattern radiating outward. Each branch of this pattern is outlined by a thin black border. The (algal partner) in this symbiotic relationship is from the genus
Cephaleuros. The sexual reproductive structures () are prominent and shaped like warts or cones. These are typically covered by a thin layer of the lichen's body (
thallus) except at the opening (ostiole), giving them a partially black appearance. The internal fertile tissue () is colourless and does not react with
iodine-based chemical tests. The spore-producing cells (
asci) are club-shaped to oblong, with a short apex () and narrow chamber. Each ascus produces eight colourless, two-celled arranged in two rows or irregularly. The asexual reproductive structures include small black, wart-like to conical chambers (
pycnidia) that are either sunken or surface-level. These produce two types of colourless spores (
conidia): larger rod-shaped to thread-like ones with two cells and short gel-like appendages at both ends (10–25
μm, never exceeding 50 μm), and smaller, single-celled, spindle to
ellipsoid-shaped ones. Chemical analysis using
thin-layer chromatography reveals no
secondary metabolites. ==Species==