NOTES ON AUSTRALIAN FUNGI. 1 1 9 



ton. See also Letters No.. 8 (1905), and No. 17 (1907) for 

 other Australian records. We have the following specimens: 

 Manly, April, 1915 (identified by Lloyd — covered with 

 minute mealy warts, well-marked sterile base, black branch- 

 ing roots, spores smooth 5*2 x 4*4/*, with pedicels 8*5/* long 

 which are very hard to differentiate in a watery medium); 

 Sydney, January, 1915 (spores 5ft, pedicels 8'5/x ; locality 

 not noted (spores 3*4 to 4/x, pedicels 5 to 12/x); Sydney, April 

 (spores yellow-brown, spherical, 4/*, pedicels 8*5/*); Mosman 

 (spores 3*4/*, pedicels up to 17/x); Milson Island, November 

 (spores 3*4 to 4ft, smooth, pedicels 7/x). 



(20.) B. Gunnii, Lloyd, Letter No. 8 (1905), Lycoperdacese T 

 p. 29 (1905), and Mycol. Notes, No. 21, p. 247, (1906), 

 pi. 70. Syn. Lycoperdon Gunnii, Berk., Hooker's PL 

 Tasm. ii, p. 264. 



Grange near Adelaide, July, 1914 (spores yellow-brown, 

 tubercnlate, 5/* in size, pedicels up to 14/x — specimens 

 identified by Lloyd who says: — "I call the spores 'smooth* 

 although they are slightly rough under a high power. All 

 Lycoperdon spores are ' rough,' but we call those smooth 

 that are not strongly rough under a £in. objective"); New 

 South Wales specimens have spores 4*2 to 5ft, pedicels up 

 to 10/x in length (Milson Island, November, and other 

 localities). 



(21.) B. bovistoides, Lloyd, Mycol. Notes, No. 21, p. 247 

 (1906), and Letters No. 8 (1905^, No. 13 (1908), No. 38 

 (1911). Syn. Mycenastrum bovistoides, . . .Grevillea, 

 Vol. 16, p. 26. 



Specimens from Australia collected by Mr. A. G. Hamil- 

 ton (probably in N.S.W.) have been identified by Lloyd. 



(22.) B. rosea, Lloyd, Mycol. Notes, No. 21, p. 248 (1906) 

 and Letter No. 23 (1908). 



Specimens of this species have been collected by Miss 

 M. Flockton and identified by Lloyd. 



