Stirtonia neotropica has a
crustose, contiguous, and smooth
thallus, spreading across areas up to 10 cm in diameter. The thallus is pale olive-colored, thin (less than 0.1 mm), and slightly glossy. This species does not contain
calcium oxalate crystals, unlike several other species within the genus. Its areas, where reproductive asci are formed, are distinctly delimited as linear, branching, and interconnected () structures. These zones are white, slightly powdery (), and are flush with or only slightly raised above the surrounding thallus. When abraded, the ascigerous areas reveal conspicuous reddish-brown dots resulting from tiny crystals located above the asci. No algal cells are present within these reproductive structures. Microscopic examination reveals reddish-brown,
ovoid asci arranged in lines, each typically containing eight
ellipsoid ascospores. The spores measure between 35 and 38
μm in length and 10–12 μm in width, with 7–11 transverse
septa. All cells within the spores are roughly equal in size and possess notably thick walls and septa exceeding 1 μm thick. This species does not show a color reaction when treated with
iodine solution (IKI−). Chemically,
Stirtonia neotropica contains
gyrophoric acid, making it chemically distinctive among its
congeners. The thallus and ascigerous zones are
C+ (patchy red), but unreactive to other spot tests (Pd−, K−, and UV−). ==Habitat and distribution==