Species in
Umbilicaria have a
foliose, thallus — a leafy body with distinct upper and lower surfaces — that is attached to the
substrate at a single central or sometimes off-centre point, producing the characteristic (navel-like) form. When moist, the thallus is usually soft, pliable, and somewhat leathery, but it often becomes brittle on drying. The upper surface ranges from pale grey-brown to black and may be smooth, cracked, warted, folded, or marked by a net-like pattern of ridges, sometimes with a raised central area. The margins are wavy and may be entire (unbroken) or incised (deeply cut). The lower surface is smooth or warted and is sometimes pitted, rarely bearing lamellae (thin plate-like ridges); it is usually black, but in some species may be pale brownish-pink. (root-like strands) may be present or absent on the lower surface, but they do not function in attachment to the substrate. Some species also produce
isidia or
soredia, structures used for
vegetative reproduction. In certain taxa, the upper is covered by a broad, short-lived epinecral layer — a thin surface film of dead cells. The is a chlorococcoid
green alga, forming either a continuous layer or discrete colonies, while the
medulla (inner tissue) may be loose or compact and is not always sharply distinct from the lower cortex. The fruiting bodies are
apothecia (open, disc-shaped reproductive structures), which may be immersed in the thallus, (sitting directly on the surface), or stalked, and are often irregular in outline. Their are black and may be flat or convex, most commonly (with ridged, maze-like folds), ring-like, or radiating, though occasionally smooth; in some cases they bear a central sterile
umbo (a small raised boss). A thick — a rim of tissue continuous with the thallus — is usually present and may be black or dark brown, although it is lacking in some species. Internally, the
hymenium (spore-producing layer) is 60–90 μm thick, with branched, septate
paraphyses (sterile filaments among the spore sacs) that are
hyaline or brown and often have swollen, pigmented terminal cells. The (tissue beneath the hymenium) is thick and brown to blackish. The
asci (spore-bearing sacs) are elongate- (narrowly club-shaped), thick-walled, eight-spored, and of the
Umbilicaria type, with an apical dome that reacts K/I+ blue (that is,
staining blue when pre-treated with
potassium hydroxide and then iodine).
Ascospores may be colourless,
ellipsoidal, and
aseptate (without internal partitions), or (divided by both longitudinal and transverse walls) and later becoming brown. The
pycnidia (
asexual fruiting bodies) are uni- or multiloculate, and their conidiophores (spore-bearing stalks) are sometimes branched, with conidiogenous loci formed terminally or just below the septa. The
conidia (asexual spores) are short, cylindrical, or slightly curved. In species that lack isidia and soredia and only rarely produce apothecia, thalloconidia may occur on the lower cortex or on rhizinomorphs; these are either single-celled or composed of several cells. ==Chemistry==