BY REV. J. E. TE^^SOX- WOODS, F.L.S., AND E. M. BAILEY, F.L.S. 83 



Bacteiditjm, Kunze. 

 This plant consists almost entirely of oblong, septate, hyaline 

 spores, which radiate from a little dot-like receptacle. 

 B.flavmiiy Kunze, on fig bark, Brisbane Scrubs (Bailey). 



PuCCINIiEI. 



Parasitic on living plants. Peridium 0. Spores producing 

 secondary spores in germination, usually oblong and septate. 

 Fuccinea straminis, Tuck., Xew South "Wales (Mueller). 

 P. cJiondrilla, Corda, New South Wales (Mueller). 



TJredo, Leveille. 

 Minute epiphyllous fungi. Eeceptacle formed of several 

 superimposed irregular cells, each containing a single, simple, 

 sessile, or very shortly stalked spore. 

 TI. maydis^ DC, on leaves of Maize, Brisbane Eiyer (Dr. Bancroft) 



Thecaphoea, Fing. 

 Spores oblong or subglobose, smooth or echinulate, agglomerated 

 together, few or many with more or less angular masses, enclosed 

 in cysts. 



T. gloluligera, B. et Br., n. sp., on Lcersia hexandra, Brisbane 

 Eiver (Bailey). 



Teichoeasis, Leveille. 

 Spores free ; attached at first to a short peduncle, which at 

 length falls away. 



T. ruligo-vera, Lev., on Semarthria compressa, Brisbane Eiver 

 (Bailey). The red rust or farmers greatest plague ; spots or 

 heaps oval, scattered, mostly on the upper surface ; epidermis 

 at length bursting longitudinally, spores subglobose, redish" 

 brown. 



Melampsoea, Cast. 

 Spores of two orders, crowded into a dense, compact masSj with 

 or without a covering, wedge-shaped. 



