The thallus of Pseudocyphellaria carpoloma has a diameter ranging between 50 and 500 mm. This lichen presents itself in vast, sprawling arrays that resemble a loosely tangled growth. The lobes of the lichen, measuring between 30–80 mm by 10–70 mm, have a distinct branching pattern – their formation subtly reminiscent of a dichotomy. Their margins are intact and delicately underlined with a yellow, wart-like structure known as pseudocyphellae.[5]
The lobes, when observed closely, display an array of colours. From a vivid lettuce-green or olive-green when wet to a pale greyish-green when dry, they often carry brownish undertones, particularly towards their tips. The lobes are strongly faveolate, meaning they have pits or depressions, giving the surface a somewhat dimpled appearance. The lichen does not produce isidia, phyllidia, maculae, or soredia–asexual reproductive propagules present in some other members of the genus.[5]
Pseudocyphellaria carpoloma has a white medulla (the inner layer), and it possesses a photobiont (photosynthesising partner), the green algal species Chlorella sphaerica.[6] The lower surface ranges from a pale yellow margin to a buff, brownish or dark red-brown central region. This surface features a noticeable rim and has a silky, bullate (blistered) texture that transitions to a slight hairiness towards the centre.[5]
The pseudocyphellae on this surface are less than 0.1 mm in diameter, scattered, wart-like, and adorn the ridges of the lichen. Minute pycnidia (asexual reproductive structures) are spread across the upper surface, appearing as small, dome-like swellings with a minute, red-brown or black apical pore encircled by a pale zone.[5]
The apothecia (fruiting bodies) of Pseudocyphellaria carpoloma are marginal and have a matt disc that ranges from a pale to dark red-brown when wet and turns black when dry. The outer rim of the apothecium, the exciple, is pale pink or whitish and has a rough texture.[5]
The asci (spore-producing structures) are cylindrical to clavate in shape and measure between 70–85 by 12–16 μm. The ascospores are grey-brown, oval-ellipsoid and have a thickened septum – a central partition. Upon maturation, the septum divides to form three sections, with the entire ascospore typically measuring between 22–25 and 7–11 μm.[5]
^ abGalloway, D.J.; James, P.W.; Wilkins, A.L. (1983). "Further nomenclature and chemical notes on Pseudocyphellaria in New Zealand". The Lichenologist. 15 (2): 135–145. doi:10.1017/s0024282983000213.
^Delise, D.F. (1822). Histoire de Lichens, Genre Sticta [History of lichens, genus Sticta] (in French). Caen: Chalopin. p. 159.
^Tschermak-Woess, Elisabeth (1988). "New and known taxa of Chlorella (Chlorophyceae): Occurrence as lichen phycobionts and observations on living dictyosomes". Plant Systematics and Evolution. 159 (1–2): 123–139. Bibcode:1988PSyEv.159..123T. doi:10.1007/bf00937430.