Sarcographa develops a thin, chalk-white to pale grey crust (
thallus) that sits flush with the bark and lacks a true . Its most conspicuous feature is a star-shaped colony of radiating : each slit is 0.5–3 mm long, commonly curved, and bordered by a completely (blackened) rim that makes the pattern stand out black against the thallus. A colourless to pale brown lines the interior, while the
hymenium is usually clear and non-. The
Graphis-type
asci contain eight
hyaline (colourless and translucent)
ascospores that become prominently —divided by numerous transverse and a few longitudinal
septa—remain iodine-negative (I–) and typically measure 30–70 × 8–16
μm. Chemically, most species produce
stictic acid or
norstictic acid (occasionally together with trace
protocetraric-series
depsidones) which can impart a yellow-brown tinge to the disc surface. The
rosette of radiating lirellae, together with the fully carbonised margins and large I– muriform spores, separates
Sarcographa from superficially similar
script lichens. In
Graphis and
Glyphis the lirellae are scattered rather than arranged in a star-burst;
Redingeria and
Reimnitzia share black rims but lack the distinctive radial pattern; whereas
Kalbographa differs by its bright orange anthraquinone . A closely allied genus,
Sarcographina, also forms rosettes, but its smaller spores react I+ (violet) and the hymenium is densely inspersed—features absent from
Sarcographa. ==Ecology==