290 
light ess s bro Gills close, nd decurrent, white then 
with a brownish “tint. Total height up to 9 inches; stem 
alone, above ground, 4 inches. Stem more or less equal, 
$ inch thick, sande with darker fibrillose scales. Sclero-. 
tium on seotión pure ‘white; 2 inches in diameter. Spores 
pear-shaped, 5 to 6x25 to 3 p. On the ground amongst 
fallen branches of duis "Cunningham, Ait. 
iM 
gum Brush, near Casino, December, 1916. Identified by C.. 
G. Lloyd. We have recently received from Mr. C. T. White, 
Government Botanist, Queensland, some undevel oped sporo- 
ais obtained by Mr. Munr o Hull at Eumundi in Novem- 
ber, 1918, on an old hickory y Tarrietia) stump in a banana 
plantation 
140. Lentinus strigosus, Fr. Co oke: Handb. Austr. 
5 
Fungi, No. 454.— ave made several lecta in New 
South Wales, two of which have been identified by Lloyd 
The pileus is up | inches in diameter, moderately 
hairy. Soe 4'5 to 5x 22 to 25 i eystidia thick- walled, 
blunt to club-shaped or irregular, 26 to 52x85 to 13° p- 
New South Wales, locality not noted; Mummulgum, near 
November, 1916; Com- 
boyne, September, 1918. See Proc. Linn. Soc. N.S. Wales 
xxxii., p. 202 (1907), for previous records. 
141. ose dealbatus, Fr. Cooke: loc. cit., 45s 
i Austr.).—We have specimens, obtained at Manildra, 
Wales, on a ilies Callitris log in October, 1916, which 
fa been identified by C. G. Lloyd: The gills when young 
were purple-violet, bnt when old id yellowish without 
voilet. A few spores, 5 to 7 x 34 p, see 
142. Lentimis fasciatus, Berk.: Hook. J., 1840, p. d 
ooke: H Í 
Sace. : d | 
(Q'and, N.S. Wales, W. Austr., Tasm.); Lloyd: Myo! 
Notes, No. 55, August, 1918, p. 796.—Our specimens, bie 
EA 
c M S AT nips ee CMR 
hu Pal adu Ue t SU as a ees OS See a ue ee ip 
