Rolueckia forms a thin, crust-like film (the
thallus) that grows directly on living leaves in moist tropical forests. This film is smooth, pale green-grey to whitish, and often edged by a narrow reddish-brown strip known as the , which marks where the lichen meets the leaf surface. Inside the thallus live microscopic
green algae (
Trebouxia-type ) that supply food through
photosynthesis.
Sexual reproduction occurs in minute, round fruit-bodies (
apothecia) that begin buried in the thallus and later break through it. Each apothecium is less than 0.2 mm across and encircled by a mixed fungal-and-thallus rim (described as ). The spore-producing layer (
hymenium) is colourless, as is the supporting tissue beneath (). Within every club-shaped
ascus eight colourless spores develop; these spores are exceptionally small (about 10–14 μm long) and are divided by one to three cross-walls (
septa), a feature that helps distinguish species in the genus. A conspicuous trait that separates
Rolueckia from other members of the family Gomphillaceae is the presence of tall, hair-like asexual organs called . These rise 0.3–0.5 mm above the thallus as stiff reddish-brown bristles that broaden into a tiny club at the tip. The club produces countless rod-shaped
propagules (diahyphae) only 5–6 μm long; unlike ordinary fungal
hyphae, these lack cross-walls and behave much like single-celled spores, allowing the lichen to spread without forming new apothecia. The internal tissues of the thallus and apothecia consist of tightly packed, lengthwise-oriented fungal cells (), while delicate supporting filaments (
paraphyses) branch and knit together above the asci. In some species, additional sterile bristles (setae) dot the surface, giving it a slightly fuzzy appearance. The combination of a leaf-dwelling crustose thallus, zeorine apothecia, club-tipped hyphophores with bacilliform diahyphae, and small, few-segmented spores defines
Rolueckia and sets it apart from superficially similar genera. ==Habitat and distribution==