264 
Tino I.AKOKR FrX(il 
Plants simple, rarely branelieil. 
Tufted, sometimes single. 
Yellow (salmon-orange in our j)lants), to 2tin., 
stout, thickest near the michlle, hollow. 
Spores spherical, 4 to u.S p. 4.')2. C. 
Whitisli, becoming- buff when drying, rarely 
with short [)rongs. Spores 5.5 x 2 ft . . 423. C. 
Solitary or in small grtjups. 
AViiite or pallid, about llin., clubs thickened 
upwarils, rugose, sometiines irregularlv 
branched. Spores subspherical, 5.(i to 
7.5 M 434. C. 
l)ral> (greyish). Simple foi-ms of 431. C. 
Coral reil under whitish bloom 435. C. 
Oapucine yellow, ilec]> chrome, etc. Club- 
sliapetl, I to 2_iin., simple, oecasionallv 
pronged. Spores sul)S])herical, 4 to N ft . . 43(i, C. 
f-usif ormis. 
rermi'Cularis. 
ftubriicjoaa. 
cinerca. 
coralli no-rosacea. 
aurcmiia. 
\Phoio. hi/ .h’ffye/j. 
Figure 58 . — VUiriiriii Kiiiiijiir.ol.or Clel. (No. 422). Mount Lofty. 
422. Clavaria sinapicolor (Tel. (L., sinapis, mustard; color, colour). — Densely 
briinched foi'ining masses up to 2] x 2 jin. and 3 .x 3in. (5.(1 x 5.(i cm. and 7.5 x 
7.5 cm.), near Mustard Yellow (xvi.) or yellower. Straw Yellow (xvi.) and 
Colonial Rulf (xxx.), Naples Yellow (xvi.) or dingier, or Light Orange Yellow 
(III.), when old near Chamois (xxx.) but yellower towards the tii)S or near 
Cinnamon Bull' (xxix.), the bases of the branches palei-, the stem whitish. The 
main branches are compacted into a broad mass at tlie base up to I jin. (3.1 cm.) 
thick. Dividing upwards repeatedly by very narrow angles into closely pressed 
nearly vertical more or less rounded rather slender slightly rugose branches, at 
first [in. ((>.5 mm.), then Jin. (3.2 mm.) and then less in diameter, tlie last 1 to 
}in. ending usually in numerous ratlier blunt prongs, some very short, often with 
wider angles between them than in the branches. Spore mass slightly but 
distinctly bull-tinted or old gold. Spores obliquely pear-shaped to elliptical, 
slightly tinted microscopically, 5.5 to occasionally 10.4 x 3.8 to 4.5, occasionally 
