Variospora flavescens features a thallus, which forms large, evenly distributed, circular patches measuring or more in diameter. The of the
thallus are closely , with rounded or irregular shapes. Their surface has a matte texture, varying in colour from pale to deep orange. The lobe-ends of this lichen species are not widened but are rounded and convex. They can sometimes appear faintly , meaning they have a white, waxy, powdery coating. The lobes, which are pleated and sometimes overlapping, are situated close to each other. The centre of the thallus has a closely , uneven texture, composed of occasionally contorted and congested lobes. These central lobes are white and non-pigmented but are spotted with orange
apothecia. These apothecia (cup-shaped fruiting bodies) reach up to 1.5 mm in diameter. They are primarily located at the centre of the thallus and are typically abundant and crowded. When young, they are flat but become convex as they age. The , or the border of the apothecia, is the same colour as the initially but becomes excluded over time. The disc varies in colour from orange to orange-brown. In microscopic cross-section viewed under
polarised light, the thallus shows small orange crystalline deposits in the upper cortex (consistent with
anthraquinone pigments), while the inner cortex may contain larger, colourless crystals interpreted as
calcium oxalate. The
paraphyses (sterile fungal filaments) are slender and range from straight to , without noticeable swelling at the ends. The lemon-shaped measure 12–15 by 8–10
μm, and are swollen at the
septum. The septum's breadth varies, reaching up to 5 μm wide.
Similar species Variospora flavescens belongs to a group of
rosette-forming, placodioid lichens that can look very similar in the field, so reliable identification often depends on a few microscopic characters. It has been compared most often with
Calogaya pusilla, which can form a similar orange rosette on calcareous stone, but
V. flavescens differs in having lemon-shaped ascospores; in
C. pusilla the ascospores are
ellipsoid. Two other rosette-forming species with lemon-shaped ascospores that may be confused with
V. flavescens are
Calogaya biatorina and
Variospora thallincola.
C. biatorina has a distinctly thinner spore septum (about one-quarter of the spore length), whereas the septum in
V. flavescens can be broader, reaching about half the length of the ascospore.
Variospora thallincola can be separated by a combination of growth form and ecology: it tends to have longer lobes and is associated with
supralittoral coastal rocks. Even with these distinctions, visible characters are variable across this polyphyletic set of lobate caloplacoid taxa, making purely morphological identification difficult in some cases. ==Habitat and distribution==