440 J. Bs CLELAND AND E. CHEEL. 
agreeing with Cooke’s illustration of this species and 
possessing fragments of a white veil attached to the edge 
of the pileus and spores measuring 14 x 10°44. The 
description given by Massee, who does not give the spore 
measurements, also fits our specimens. Milson Island, 
Hawkesbury River, September 1914. 
P. campanulatus.—Cooke records the species from Vic- 
toria. A very common Panzeolus on cow and horse dung 
(the habitat showing that it is not an indigenous species) 
has given us much trouble in identification. When moist, 
it resembles Cooke’s illustration of P. sphinctrinus, save 
that veil remnants are not to be seen, but when dry it is 
smooth and shining. The spores measure 10°4 to 16 x 7°2 
to 94 (Massee for P. campanulatus gives 8 to 9 X 6h, and 
Cooke 15 to 18 x 9to13!). The smooth shining cap when 
dry, a more or less rufescent stem and a whitish edging to 
the gills incline us to place our specimens under P. cam- 
panulatus. We are, however, not at all sure that the 
Specimen referred to by us under P. sphinctrinus, and 
which we think is probably a correct identification, is not 
the same species as that to which these specimens—or 
some of them—belong, more especially as our P. sphine- 
trinus and several of these others frequently show fine 
cob-web like dark fibrils on the cap, which Massee refers 
to as being sometimes found in P. sphinctrinus. 
BOLETUS. 
Boletus granulatus, L.—This glutinous species with 
yellow pores is recorded by Cooke for Victoria and Queens- 
land, and one of us’ has recorded it for New South Wales. 
It is quite common during the months from March to May 
in the Port Jackson district, and we have specimens also 
collected at Hill Top and Moss Vale on the Southern Line, 
and Leura and Mount Wilson on the Western Line. We 
1 (E.C.) Proc. Linn. Soc. N.S.W., 1910, p. 137. 
