4. 
CLADODERRIS, Pers. : 
C. Pritzelii, P. Hennings Hedwigia slii. 74. (After Dr. E. 
Pritzel.) Pileus czespitose, imbricate, sessile, decurrent to the base 
coriaceous, conchate, sinuose-crispate, upper side densely tomentose, 
zonate-suleate, rugulose, margin acute, cinnamon-coloured, sinuose, 
usually about 4 in., 2} in. broad; hymenivum of a rusty-grey colour ; 
ribs radiatingly-branched, suleate rugose, verrucose, velvety ; spores 
subglobose, punctulate, hyaline, smooth, 33-4 .—P. Henn Le. 
Hab. : On dead wood, Kuranda.— E. Pritzel. 
HYMENOCHETE, Lev. 
H. leonina, Berk. Curt. Cuban Fungi No. 423. Cooke, n Grev.. 
viii. 148. Sace. Syll. Fung. vi. 597. Wholly resupinate, croced= 
ferrugineous, margin tomentose; uneven, inseparable, not eracked ;. 
bristles somewhat sharp, 70 x 10 p.—Soce. l. 
Hab. : Eumundi, on Sterculia.—#. Pritzel. 
CORTICIUM, Fries. 
. calceum, Fries. Cooke,in Handb. Austr. Fungi 193. Broadly 
ffused, adglutinate, wavy, smooth, white, margin similar ; hymeniunr 
: Bry Ae 
even, cracking when dry, pallid; spores cylindrically ellipsoid, 
—Cooke l.c. 
Hab.: Upper Barron River.—£. Pritzel. 
TREMELLIN EZ. 
_ Homogeneous, gelatinous, collapsing when dry, reviving when 
moistened.—COooke, in Handb. Austr. Fungi 205. 
AURICULARIA, Bull. 
A. delicata, Fries. P. Henn. Engl. Bot. Jahrb. xviii. 24. 
Hab. : On dead wood, Kuranda.—E. Pritzel (P. Hennings Hedw. slii.). 
DACRYOMYCES, Nees. 
D. deliquescens, Duly. Cooke, in Handb. Austr. Fungi 209- 
Subrotund, rooting, convex, immarginate yellowish, at length con- 
torted, hyaline } line broad; spores oblong, curved, obtuse, triseptate, 
15-16 x 6-7 , four guttulate, hyaline. 
Hab.: On dead wood, Kuranda.—E. Pritzel (Cooke l.e.). 
GASTROMYCETE%. 
Terrestrial, rarely growing on wood, membranaceous, conser? 
or fleshy, enclosed in a variable receptacle or peridium ; fructification 
consisting of basidii spores, enclosed untii maturity in the peridinn + 
spores continuous, spherical or ellipsoid, hyaline or coloured.— Cooke, 
Handb. Austr. Fungi 211. : 
PHALLOIDE*. 
Fungi between fleshy and gelatinous, erumpent from a volvo; 
hymenium slimy, rather fleshy, and deliquescent.— Cooke Le. 
