300 



yellowish-white (Dauthenay, pi. 13, Ton 4), cap tinted with 

 pale otter brown, paler than otter brown (pi. 354, Ton 1) ; 

 pellicle on pileus, greyish-brown with minute punctate spots, 

 pores bright yellow, 1/ 16th inch deep, Bradley Head, Syd- 

 ney, May, 1918; on underside of dead fallen trunk, Berrima, 

 July, 1919, spores 8'5 x 6 /x — colour tint noted, pores near 

 massicot yellow (Ridgway, pi. xvi.). 



179. Polyporus gilvus, Schw. Cooke: Handb. Austr. 

 Fungi, No. 641; Clel.' and Cheel : Jour. Proc. Roy. Soc. N.S. 

 Wales, li., 1917, p. 533, Sect. 91, No. 143.— Near Wauchope, 

 February, 1917, identified by Lloyd; Bulli Pass, November, 

 1917; Myall Lakes (Mr. Gross), May. 



180. Polyporus gilvus, var. scruposus, Fr. Cooke : 

 loc. cit., No. 643; Clel. and Cheel: Joe. cit., p. 534, Sect, 91, 

 No. 143a. — Barron Falls, Kuranda, Queensland, September, 

 1917 (Mrs. Fraser). 



181. PoJ yporus pertusus, Fr. (as Trametes). Llloyd : 

 Mycol. Notes, No. 58, 1917, p. 827. — Barron Falls, Kuranda, 

 Queensland, September, 1917 (Mrs. Fraser), setae brown, 

 sharp-pointed, 25 to 34 x 7 fi at base; identified for us by C. 

 G. Lloyd (No. 426). Speaking of .this specimen in the note 

 above cited, Lloyd states that this species belongs to the 

 "gilvus" group, having the same colour, spores, and setae, 

 but the upper flesh is soft and spongy, as in P. fruticum. He 

 considered it a very rare plant. 



182. Polyporus Patouillardii , Rick. Lloyd : Letter 68, 

 Note 738; Clel. and Cheel: Joe. eit., p. 539, Sect. 95, No. 

 154. — Bribie Island, Moreton Bay, Queensland, spores 

 yellow-brown, 5 x 3"4 ju,, no setae — Lloyd in determining this 

 (No. 499) adds "this (determination) does not seem exactly 

 right to me"; Warren, N.S. Wales, on decaying trunk of a 

 large specimen of Acacia salicina, var. varians, Benth., spores 

 7*2 x 6 /a — confirmed by Lloyd ; Malanganee, near Casino, 

 August, 1917, spores brown, 4*8 x 3'4 fi, no setae — identified 

 by Lloyd (No. 415), Lloyd in the above note now thinks 

 that the species grades into P. dryad tux, Fr., the Australian 

 plants being midway between the two with dark spores but 

 no setae-like hyphae. 



183. Polyporus fruticum, Berk. Cooke: Joe. cit., No. 

 649; Clel. and Cheel: Joe. cit., Sect, 96. No. 155.— On 

 shrubs, about 1 foot or so from the ground, Malanoranee, near 

 Casino, August, 1917 — identified by Lloyd (No. 397) ; Barron 

 Falls, Kuranda, Queensland (Mrs. Fraser), September, 1917 

 — identified by Lloyd (No. 434). 



184. Vol ypor us sessilis, Murr. ; in Clel. and Cheel : Joe. 

 cit., under Sect. 98b. — Barron Falls, Kuranda, Queensland, 

 September, 1917 (Mrs. Fraser) ; Lloyd in identfying these 





