262 FLORA OF TASMANIA. | Fungi, by M. J. Berkeley. 
l. Tremella frondosa (Fr. Ep. p. 588). 
Has. On dead wood, Gunn. 
2. Tremella foliacea (Fr. Ep. p. 588). 
Has. On dead wood, Gunn, Archer. 
3. Tremella lutescens (Fr. Ep. p. 588). 
Haz. On dead wood, Archer. 
4. Tremella mesenterica (Retz, Fr. Ep. p. 588). 
Has. On dead wood, Gunn, Archer. 
Both spermatiferous and sporiferous. 
5. Tremella albida (Huds. Fr. Ep. p. 589). 
Has. On dead wood, Archer. 
6. 'Tremella olens (Berk.); irregularis, gelatinosa, pallida, olens, sporis oblongis. (TAB, CLXX XIII. 
Fig. 5.) 
Has. On dead wood, Archer. 
Irregular, dirty-white, inclining to brown, effused, slightly lobed. Spores oblong, 175-3045 inch in length, 
accompanied by very minute subglobose spermatia. Smell faint, unpleasant.— When dry, forming a shapeless mass, 
like the young state of some Gasteromycete. T have seen no globose or lobed sporophores in this Species.— PLATE 
CLXXXIII. Fig. 5; a, structure; 3, spores; c, spermatia :—all magnified. 
7. Tremella viscosa (Berk. et Br. in Ann. Nat. Hist. xiii. p. 406). 
Has. On dead wood, Archer. 
Gen. XXXI. EXIDIA, Pr. 
Gelatinosa, tremula, submarginata, contextu floccoso, subtus sterilis ; hymenio papillato. 
Distinguished at once from Tremella by the inferior surface being sterile, and the upper papillate. (Name from 
exsudo, to ooze out.) 
1. Exidia glandulosa (Fr. Ep. p. 591). 
Has. On dead wood, Archer. 
Gen. XXXII, HIRNEOLA, 7. 
Tremula, sed non gelatina distenta, subtus hispidula ` Aymenio levi, distincto. 
Separated from Eridia on account of its firmer substance and even hymenium. In most of the species the 
barren surface is hispid. ZZ. auricula is found in almost every part of the world. (Name from hirnea, a vessel.) 
l. Hirneola Auricula-Judze (Berk.). (Exidia, Fr.) 
Has. On dead wood, Gunn. 
?. Hirneola vitellina (Mont. Syll. p. 182); pallida, orbicularis, undulata, pusilla, stipite brevi 
compresso, sporis endochromate multiannulato.— Berk. in F7, Antaret. p. 940. t. 164, Zä. Yxidia vitel- 
lina, Lë, (Tas. CLXXXIII. Fig. 6.) 
Haz. On dead wood, Archer. 
Pale honey-coloured (orange or deep-yellow), à inch across, orbicular, umbilicate, undulated, even beneath. 
Stem short, compressed, darker than the pileus. Spores . 2501500 inch long, hyaline, curved, obtuse above, rather 
pointed at the base. Endochrome hyaline, divided into several annular masses, which are sometimes again divided; 
