Tephromela lichens form crusts that adhere firmly to the rock or bark they
colonise. The surface is usually white to pale grey and may look glossy, cracked into tiny angular islands () or dotted with low warts; dark grey–black powdery
soredia sometimes blanket the
thallus and mute its base colour. A thin, dark line is occasionally visible between the areoles, marking where the colony advances. Microscopy reveals a layer of
green algal cells 6–18
μm across (the ) embedded in a colourless fungal
medulla that shows no iodine
staining reaction (I–). Reproductive bodies appear as black discs (
apothecia) that begin sunken in the crust but soon sit flush or slightly raised. Each retains a rim of thallus tissue (the ), while the —the inner cup wall found in many other lichens—is reduced to a thin, often barely perceptible layer. Chemical pigments give the spore-bearing layer a lilac to purple colour that turns bright red in a drop of sodium hypochlorite (the N test); a similar hue coats the tops of the slender
paraphyses that thread the
hymenium. Beneath lies a pale ochre to brown .
Asci are of the
Bacidia-type and contain eight colourless
ascospores that are
ellipsoid, lack cross-walls (
septa and have comparatively thick walls but no outer gelatinous sheath. Minute flask-shaped
pycnidia embedded in the crust release straight, colourless
conidia that range from stubby rods to fine threads. Chemically the genus is varied: many species deposit
atranorin or
lichexanthone in the cortex and store an assortment of
depsidone acids in the
medulla.
Tephromela is distinguished from superficially similar genera by its persistent thalline margin, purple-violet hymenium, poorly developed exciple,
Bacidia-type asci and chain-forming conidiogenous cells. ==Species==