228 



29. Bailey (F. M.)— "Contributions to tlie Queensland 

 Flora." Botany Bull. VIII. Dept. Ag., Q., 1S93. 

 Forty-five species of fungi are recorded. 



Additional Fungus Blights." Report of Colonial 



30. 



31. 



Life." 



" Description of Two New Fungi in the Collection 



of Sir W. J. Uooker." Hook., Journ. Hot. II., PI. 1, 

 1840. 



Lentinus J'asciaius is described from Tasmania. 



Botanist in Ann. Rep. Dept. Ag., Q., 1893. 

 Six fungi are noted and two new. 



■ Companion for the Queensland Student of Plant 



32. "Botany abridged " Dept. Ag., Q., 1894. 



Edible fungi in Queensland recorded. 



33. "Contributions to the Queensland Flora." Botany 



Bull. IX. Dept. Ag., Q, 1894. 



Thirty-six species described and two recorded 

 without description. 



34. Bailey (F. M.) and Gordon (P. R.)— "Plants reputed 



Poisonous and Injurious to Stock." 8vo. Brisbane, 

 1837. 



A few fungi are added, injurious to fodder plants. 

 Nine altogether, with an illustration. 



Bailey (F. M.)— [See " Tenison-Woods (J. E )" ] 



35. Baxckoft (J.) — "Experiments with Indian Wheats in 



Queensland." Proc. Roy. Soc, Queensland, I., Pt. 4, 

 1884. 



Indian Wheats of the tall dark-bearded kinds 

 found to be rust-resisting. 



30. Bancroft (T. L.) — "Notes on Bacterial Diseases of the 

 Roots of Lcguminosaj." Proc. Linn. Soc, N.S.W., 

 Vol. VIII., Pt. I., 1893. 



Five leguminous jilants affected — Mimosa, Ses- 

 bania, Desmodium, Medicago, and Crotalaria. 



37. Barwick (J.)— "Smut in Wheat." Proc. Roy. Soc, 



Tasm., 1889. 



Considers that it is gi'ain damaged in threshing 

 which is smutty, and self-sown grain is never 

 smutty. 



38. Bell (R.) — " Some Account of Red Rust and its Remedy." 



Pp. 10. Ballarat, 1893. 



The remedy given is to apply a solution of common 

 salt to the growing wheat plant — 1 lb. of salt 

 to 1 gallon of water. 



39. Beknett (G.) — "Gatherings of a Naturalist in Austral- 



asia." 8vo. Lond., 1860. 



Reference to a luminous agaric. 



40. Benson (A. H.) — " Principal Insect and Fungus Pests in 



New South Wales, and their remedies." Ag. Gaz., 

 N.S.W., III., Pt. 8, 1892. 



Notices injurious fungi, with their remedies, on 

 Citrus, Apple, Pear, Apricot, Plum, and 

 Peach trees, and Vines. 



41. "Apple Culture." Ibid. V., Pt. 6., 1894. 



Fungus diseases of Apple described and illustrated. 



42. Berkeley (M. J.) — " Contributions towards the Flora 



of Van Diemen's Land." Fungi. Ann. Nat. Ilist. III., 

 1839. 



Twenty-seven species given, twelve of which are 

 common European fungi. 



50. 



51. 



52. 



83. 



54. 



55. 



56. 



58. 



1844. 



IV 



44. Berkeley (M. J.) — ■" On some Entomogenous Sphsria;." 

 Hook., Lond. Jouru. Bot. II., PI. 1, 1S43. 



Seven described altogether, and one (Sphwria 

 Taylori) described and figured from N.S.W. 



' Decades of Fungi." Decade I. Ibid. Ill , PI. 2, 



Three new species are described from Australia — 

 Agaricux nittiformis, Poli/ponis porteiitosus, and 

 Aserw rubra. 



•"Decades of Fungi." Decades III.-VII. Ibid. 

 , PI. 2, 1845. 



Forty-nine new species described, and some 

 figured. 



" Decades of Fungi." Decades VIII.-X. Ibid. IV., 



PI. 2, 1845. 



Three new species decribed — Spharia elevata, S. 

 pulvinulus, and S. inspersa. 



"Decades of Fungi." Decade XL Ibid. V., 1S46. 



Four new species described for Australia — 

 Marasmius hepaiicus^ Hexagovia similiSy Poly- 

 porus brunneo-leucus, and Pcziza fusispora. 



"On Cordvceps Gunnii." Hook., Lond. Journ. 



Bot. VII., 577, PI. 22, 1848. 



First described and figured. 



45. 



46. 



47. 



48. 



49. 



'On some Entomogenous SpliKria;.' 



Linn. 



Journ. I., PI. I, 1856. 



Entomogenous species of Cordyccps mentioned for 

 Australia — C. G«H«a' and C. Taylori. 



" Introduction to Cryptogamic Botany." 8vo. 



London, 1857. 



Refers to various Australian fungi, and gives 

 drawings of some such as Cyttaria Gunuii. 



'Flora of Tasmania." Fungi. Hooker's Botany 



of the Antarctic Voyage. 4to. Pt. III., Vol. IL, PI. 4. 



London, 1860. 



Two hundred and seventy-five species are described, 

 only about eight of which are peculiarly Aus- 

 tralian. 



" Outlines of British Fungology." 8vo. Lond., 



1860. 



Tasmanian fungi referred to at pp. 34 and 35. 



"On a Collection of Fungi from Cuba." Journ. 



Linn. Soc. X., 1808. 



Habitats given for species occurring also in Aus- 

 tralia. 



" Australian Fungi, received principally from 



Baron F. von Mueller and Dr. R. Schomburgh." Ibid. 

 XIII., 1873. 



Fungi characterized, and where new described ; 

 received during a period of nearly twenty 

 years. 



' Enumeration of the Fungi collected during the 



Expedition of H.M.S. Challenger." 1874-5. (Third 

 notice) Ibid. XVI., 1877. 



Forty-nine species are recorded altogether from the 



neighbourhood of Sydney, N.S.W., and new 



species are described. 



" Gardener's Chronicle." 791, Fig. 130. 1878. 



Description of Cordyceps Meiiesteridis — the same 

 as, or a variety of, C. entomurrliiza. 



"Australian Fungi." Part II. Received principally 



from Baron F. von Mueller. Ibid. XVIII. , 1880. 



A number of new species described. 



