OF SOUTH AUSTRAMA. 
227 
(letennined three for us growing on CalUiris wood, and in tlie above Key we have 
tried to t)ring out the features by which fi'oiii tluhi' descrii)tions tlie three species 
may be differentiated. Of tlie specimens forwarded to Dr. Lloyd, one, from 
Manildra, New South Wales, he considered as proliably an old example of L. 
sepiaria Fr. It had apparently a pale growing edge and agrees fairly well 
with American specimens determined as such by Dr. Weir. Other thin plants 
from the Hawkesbury Kiver, Now South Wales, he determined as L. abietina Fr. 
He determined a zoned form from Narrabri, New South Wales, as L. fitriata 
Swartz, though he thought it differed a little from American (?) plants, lie 
determined as L. striata (with comment) extensive thin brown zoned velutinate 
plants with a tendency to a pale edge from Imbil State Forest, near Gympie, 
Queensland (perhaps growing on some Coniferous species other than Callitris). 
In two localities in South Australia we have met with a Lensites growing on 
Callitns. From one of these localities, Kinchina, one collection matches the 
Gympie one, another is practically indistinguishable from specimens of L. striata 
forwarded by Dr. Lloyd, both being almost dimidiate, whilst a third is like Dr. 
Weir’s collection of L. sepiaria. We have decided to refer the South Australian 
specimens to L. striata and are inclined to think that our collections from the 
other States also belong to the same species. 
348. Lenzites striata Swartz. (L., striatus, furrowed). — Forming almost 
dimidiate imbricate brackets up to “in. (18 mm.) broad, or thinner reflexed 
pilei laterally attached by a broad base, or laterally attached convex to nearly 
plane brackets, 3in. (7.5 cm.) or more laterally, projecting l]in, (3.1 cm.), often 
imbricate, or when growing round the base of a stump imbricate and like a 
flattened rosette. Pileus obscurely zoned, rather irregular, velutinate to adpressed 
strigose, 3 to 5 mm. or more thick, near Snuff Brown (xxix.) becoming pallid, 
growing edge sometimes pale. Gills according to the shape of the pileus tending 
to radiate, if the attachment is stem-like <lecurrent on to it, usuallv lacerated, 
sometimes crinkled, occasionally anastomosing, about 0.5 mm. apart. Snuff Brown 
becoming Bister (xxix.) with a cinereous tinge. Spores elongated, 9.5 to 11 x 
3.7 to 4.5 fi. South Australia — Kinchina, Polda (E.P., 30 miles N.E. of Elliston). 
.luly, August, November. (Figure 51.) 
CYCLOMYCES Kunze. 
(Gr., Tcyklos, a circle; mylcrs, a fungus.) 
“Receptacle leathery, membranaceous or tough flesliy, resupinate, half-hat- 
shaped or central stemmed, llymenopliore of mostly vein-like united lamellae 
arranged concentrically, parallel with the edge, on the undersi<le of the 
receptacle. ’ ’ — Killermann. 
No species recorded for Australia. 
PAVOLUS Fries. 
(L., favus, honeycomb.) 
“Receptacle leathery, fleshy or almost membranaceous. llvmenium of 
anastomosing lamellae reticulated radially in an elongated cellular or honeycomb 
fashion. Basidia with four sterigmata. Spores hyaline. ’ ’ — Killermann. 
Favolvs hispidulus B. et 0. is recorded for South Australia in Cooke’s Handbook 
of Austi'alian Fungi, No. 900, but we have not met with it. 
F. rhipidium Berk. (Cooke, No. 899), following Dr. C. G. Lloyd, is placed under 
Polyporus (see No. 312 in this Han(lbook). 
ELMERINA Bresadola. 
(After Elmer, an American collector.) 
“Receptacle membranaceous-leathery, hat-shaped. llymenopliore porose- 
lamollate or daedaloid, densely bristly the bristles many celled. ’ ’ — Killermann. 
No species recorded for Australia. 
