80 THE VICTORIAN NATURALIST. 
Geaster floriformis, Vittadini. 
Lycoperdon pusillum, Batsch, 
% coelatum, Fries. 
Polysaccum pisocarpum, Fries. 
Cyathus desertorum, F. v. Mueller. 
4) fimicola, Berkeley. 
Spumaria alba, Fries. 
Didymium farinaceum, Fries. 
Stemonitis fusca, Roth, 
Aecidium microstomum, Berkeley. 
»,  Lagenophore, Cooke. 
. »  Lrenanthis, Linné, 
Uredo bulbipes, Kalchbrenner. 
»  Cichoracearum, Candolle. 
Puccinia Lagenophore, Cooke. 
»  Lrunorum, Cooke. 
Ustilago carbo, Tulasne. 
,  digitarig, Rabenhorst. 
Podosporium grande, Cooke. 
Sporidesmium atro-fuscum, Cooke. 
Penicillium candidum, Cooke. 
Antennularia scoriadea, Berkeley. 
ki Robinson, M. and Berkeley. 
Geoglossum Muellert, Berkeley. 
Peziza fusipora, Berkeley. 
»  vesiculosa, Fries. 
»,  apiculata, Cooke. 
»  applanata, Fries. 
Asterina Rose, Fries. 
Nectria ferruginea, Cooke. 
The 101 fungi, enumerated on this occasion, bring up the number 
for Victoria to 340 ; those added in 1885 through the exertions of 
the writer will be published early next year, when probably likewise 
the very large number of Mosses, Lichens and Algs, accumulated 
during the few last years as new for the central Australian colonies, 
can connectedly be recorded together with the many additional fungs 
obtained from beyond Victoria. That for years to come much 
novelty will be discovered yet particularly among Australian fungs, 
cannot be doubted, when we consider, how much they depend for 
their development on favourable seasons, how capriciously many of 
these kinds of plants do make their appearance, and how local many 
of the species anyhow are in their occurrence,—not to speak of the 
need of microscopic search for the minutest of these memorable 
organisms, even if new vegetable immigrations were not constantly 
adding to the fungus-flora also. 
