OF SOUTH AUSTRALIA. 
261 
South Australia — A sterile S])eeiuien from Encounter Bav, January, 1925, has 
been identified by Professor E. A. Burt. Fructifications patchv, up to 15 x 4 
cm., on the underlying side of thick sheets of fallen Eucalyptus bark. The 
periphery fibrillose-byssoid with coarse spreading strands. Warm Buff (xv.) to 
Chamois (xxx.), darker than mustard-yellow in colour. The consolidated older 
pojtion is smooth, almost glazed, Cream Buff (xxx.) and paler in colour. Hynhae 
5.5 to occasionally 1 1 in diameter, occasionally septate, granule-incrusted, often 
flattened, yellowish. Also Mount Lofty (near Antimony Yellow, xv.). 14e\v 
South Wales — Neutral Bay (Warm Buff xv., under surface brigliter, yellower 
tlian Yellow Ochre, xv., spores 5.2 to 5.5 x 2 ft, on fallen ti’unk). January, 
May, June, October. 
WIESNERINA y. Hohnel. 
(After Wiesner, an Austrian botanist.) 
'‘Receptacle yery small, hemispherical, on a narrowed base, bristly. Jlymenium 
superioi'. Basidia with 2-4 sterigmata. Cystidia numerous, yery long, lanceolate, 
rough, springing from tlie base of the 'receptacle. Spore s'mooth, white.”— 
Killermann. 
No Australian species recorded. 
