It spends the drier months of the year as a powdery deposit on rocks and tree trunks but when it's wet the alga grows into a forest of minute filaments, forming a dense mat on the surface.
You can see the filaments in this close-up, grouped together to form golden cushions that are a few millimetres in diameter. This wall is constantly wet, due to water percolating through from the railway track bed, so conditions are near-perfect for the growth of the alga.
When the tufts coalesce into a golden carpet they provides a very striking back-drop for other plants that are colonising the wall, like this ivy and .....
There are other liverworts on the wetter sections of the wall, including this one which I think is Pellia endiviifolia.
The crevices are home to mosses and this little fern with leathery fronds - wall rue Asplenium ruta-muraria.
The alga seems to thrive particularly well on the cement but there are patches of lichen on some of the stones. A close look at this one revealed ....
.... these fungal fruiting bodies, which look like tiny pink toadstools. I think this is a species in the genus Baeomyces.
Another lichen, this time .....
... with fruiting bodies (apothecia) that look like minute disks of liquorice. A species of Lecidea?
This lichen is a Cladonia species, probably C. fimbriata
Lichens are formed by the symbiotic association between a fungus and an alga and it's very likely that the algal symbiont of some of the lichens on this wall is Trentepohlia.
Back now for a closer look at the alga Trentepohlia, this time under the microscope.
Under low magnification (c. x40) with a stereo-microscope you can see the forest of algal filaments that make up those orange cushions, while ....
....... here, under a compound microscope (x100) you can see the cells that make up the filaments, and .....
.... at a higher magnification still (c. x400) you can see the granular, pigmented contents of the cells.
There are animals living in the crevices in this wall, including the fearsome snake-back spider - but that's another story.