304 
736.—In identifying Appa (No. 432) for us, found o 
fallen trunk at Kendall in December, 1917, iege eila 
68, Note 736) at as follows:—‘‘In my Fom s Synopsis as 
a Fomes, but really a Prarintess, The type is a thin plant, 
hardly 4 cm. thick, but this specimen is : cm. thick. The 
surface is not of as dark a colour as the type, but no doubt 
will be when it gets to be as old as the Md "Half- toasted' is 
a good name for it now, but not for the type now.' 
HYDNACEAE. 
HyvpNuw. 
198. Hydnum rufescens, Pers.: Sym., p. 555; Massee : 
Brit. Fung. Flora, i. 52. A colour form of H. repandum, 
L. (Lloyd). —Lloyd has identified specimens for us under this 
designation. The fl the Australian species turns reddish- 
brown when n curn Neutral Bay, Sydney, June, 1912 and 
1916; Newington, S dney, June, 1914; ilson Island, 
Hawkesbury River, July, 1912; National Park, New South 
Wales, July, 1916, Spores 3:5 to 5°5 p, spherical to oval. 
. Hydnum coralloides, Scop.: Carn:, 2, p. 472; 
Massee: Brit. Fung. Flora, i., p. 156; Cooke: Handb. Austr. 
Fungi, No. 925 ua — The identification has been con- 
firr rmed for us sed C. Lloyd. Mount seed Blue Moun- 
2 i 
. Hydnum ochraceum, Pers. w is 6725 ; 
Cooke: Handb. Austr. Fungi, No. 928 (Vict., and).— 
Specimens, wee by, Lloyd (No. 391), were pss at 
Lismore in August, 1917. 
1. Hie Se Berk.: Linn. J., xvi., 167; 
Sacc. :' Syll., 6727; Cooke: Handb. Austr. Fungi, No. 929 
CAN. d 
(N.S. Wales, Q'lan pecimens collected at Lisarow 1n 
June, 1916, were sent. to C. G. Lloyd, who, in referrring to 
aug diesen ad judge from my photograph of the 
de trim tified by Lloyd (No. 352). We have also 
s at North Ba Sydney, in June, 1916, 
me cm. iind, gibbous, rugose, slightly 
to reddish-brown; flesh dark brown; teeth 
ular, more or Neo central, browni 
