293 
ies,” described By Berkeley from the Southern United 
‘spec 
Ps in is not a hg e species, but an aberrant form of L.. 
betulina. He says, ‘‘The context is white, the gills typically 
those of the common Lenzites betulina, but the upper surface 
is different. It is ipe not pubescent, nor zoned, but 
glabrous and rugulos We have also collected a specimen 
at Lorne, near Kendall, September, 1918. 
50. Lenzites striata, Swartz. Fr.:.Epicr., i., p. 406; 
Sacc. : de 2653 ; Cooke: Handb. Austr. Fungi, No. 531 
(Q'land, Vict.).—On fallen Callitris log, Na rrabri, Novem- 
ber, 1916 (identified by Lloyd, No. 266). Lloyd says of these 
specimens that they are not exactly the common plant of 
the-American tropics, but close to it. “The colour, gills, and 
general shape are the same, but the surface is harder and 
more zonate. 
151. Lianti saepiaria, Fr.: Hym. Eur., 494; Cooke : 
Illustrs., pl. 11464; Sacc.: Syll, 2636 ; Cooke: Handb. 
Austr. Fungi, No. 528 (Vict. ).—Specimens identified by Lloyd 
(No. 219) from Manildra, October, 1916, on old Callitris 
stump. 
152. Lenzites Beckleri, Berk.: Linn. Journ., xin., 161; 
Sacc.: Syll., 2664; Cooke: Handb. Austr. Fungi, No. 536 
repa dida. “The gills of L. Beckleri are more 
lamellate, his those of L. betulina, but I put more stress on 
the Content nature and ait of this group of plants than 
on the hymenial configur In na ature of context an 
surface it approaches mpi lactinea." 
153. Lenzites repanda, Mont. Fr.: Epicr., 404; Sacc 
Syll., 2688: Cooke: Handb.. Austr. Fungi, Ha 542 
(Q'land, N.S. Wales).—Eumundi, Q'land, January, 1911 (J. 
> 
nes xix E Cooke a poe eda No. 868 
