Lael ec S e pR s 
tup T ee TE 
281 
end more pointed, 7 to, 9 x 3:4 to 4 p. Under bushes, Mos- 
man, Sydney, April, May. 
.. 123. Collybia stipitaria, Fr. Massee: Brit. Fung. Flora, 
ui., p. 129.—We have collected this species on one occasion 
on Milson Island, Hawkesbury River, in March. As men- 
tioned by C. G. Lloyd (Mycolog. Notes, No. 100), it revives 
e 
l 
slightly decurrent. Stem up to ł inch high, base slightly 
swollen, hollow, villous, dark brown.  Spores elliptical, 
44 to 52x25 to 34 p. Attached to the bases of living 
grass stems. (D. I. C., Watercolour 33.) 
HYGROPHORUS. 
SUBGENUS HYGROCYBE. 
124. Hygrophorus miniatus, Fr. Cooke: Handb. Austr. 
Fungi, No. 383 (Q'land, Vict.).—Our specimens approach 
pileus or with a decurrent tooth. Stem 1} to 21 inches high, 
dilated upwards, solid, sometimes hollow, crimson, with base | 
October; Tuggerah, October; H iver, November 
ygrophorus conicus, Fr ke: Joc. cit., No 
(Vict.).—Our collections of this species escribed as 
follows :—Pileus 2 inch in diameter, elongated globular, then 
convex with an acute umbo, fibrillosely streaked, yellowish- 
green or dark greyish-brown, turning black with black fibrils. 
Gills just free or just sinuately adnexed, triangular; yellowish 
uing grey or dark grey. Stem 24 to 3j inches high, 
rather fibrillose and twisted, the fibrils later becoming 
i 
