289 
tough, not phosphorescent. Spore elongated, 8'5 to 88 x 34 p, 
no cystidia. On upper surface of M trunk. Hawkesbury 
River, December, 1914. (Herb., C., Form. Sp. 18.) 
136. Pleurotus subostreatus, n. ek Pie up to 7 eas 
broad and 4 inches from before backwards, convex, becoming 
depressed towards its attachment, pallid whitish, matt. Gills 
thick, creamy-white, anastomosing near the base to form a 
network. Laterally attached by a short broad pallid to 
-brown matt "ES. 3 inch long and § inch thick. Spores pear- 
shaped, 4 x 2 "On a fallen log, Wauchope, N.S. Wales, 
February, S A i hát species seems to approach Panus in 
texture. It differs from P. PN iei in the definite brownish 
stem and in the small spores. 
Pileus ad 17:5 x10 em., convexus, albidus, E 
amellae crassae, subflavo-albidae, ad basem anastomosae. 
Stipes ad 2 cm. longus, lateralis, brevis, crassus, pallidus 
ad fuscus, subtomentosus. Sporae pyriformes, 4x 
‘137. Pleurotus Cheelii, Mass.: Kew Bull., 1907, p. 122; 
Proc. Linn. Soc. N.S. Wales, xxxii. (1907), p. 202. — Small, 
white. Pileus thickly hairy, attached by the vertex. Gi ls 
radiating from the centre, moderately close, rather thick. 
Spores thick-walled, subspherical, 6 to 8, 75x58, 85x7 p. 
On branches, Eden, Twofold pay. Magd of the in. 
National Park, N.S. Wales, July, 1 
38. Pleurotus striatulus, Pr PR t 89, IT D. Dec: 
imi slightly striate, powdery looking. Gills ModerMeuy sh 
* living cultivated ia de ( Morus alba, rà H pra Island, 
eh Wkesbury River, June, 1913 (spores 5'5 x3 6 p); on a 
Bey, 
son, Pond all the latter with subepherical spores, 4'8 to 
55 p (hence some pte exists as to there being two species, 
with oval and subspherical spores respectively). 
LENTINUS.: 
139. Lentinus tuber-regium, Rumph. Lloyd: Mycol. 
Notes, No. 47, 1917, p. 666, fig. 959 (this collection).— 
i: Pileus up to 6 inches across, deeply infundibuliform, slightly 
