OF SOl’TlI AT’STRALIA. 
333 
fuscous or tawny brownish. Bpines 2 to 4 mni. long, conical, straight, gelatinous, 
white or glaucous. Flesh gelatinous, transparent, thick, hyaline. Spores sub- 
globose, inulti-guttulate, white, 4 to 7 /r. Basidia gloV)ose, longitudinally septate, 
14 to 18 X 10 to 12 n, with 2 to 4 sterigmata. Edible. On stumps and on the 
ground.” — Rea. New South Wales — Mount Wilson (spores 7 to 10.4 ix). June. 
(Figure 72.)] 
PEOTODONTIA von lloehn. 
(Gr., protos, first; odous, odontos,. a tooth.) 
“Like the genus Odontia in appearance, but possessing vertically septate 
basidia. Growing on wood. ’ ’ — Rea. 
No South Australian species recorded. 
[From watercolour hy JZtv.'f P. Chtrlee. 
Figure 72. — Tremellodon yek(tino.ram (Scop.) Pers. (No. 552a). 
Mount Wilson (N.S.W.). 
SEBACINA Till. (THELEPHORA (Ehrh.) Fr. p.p.). 
(L., sebacinus, greasy.) 
‘ ‘ Receptacle coriaceous, gelatinous, membranaceous, waxy, floccose or pulveru- 
lent ; resupinate, effused, adnate or crustaceous, and with the habit of a 
Cortioium. llymenium smooth or papillose. Basidia longitudinally cruoiately 
divided, close together or scattered, sometimes intermixed with tlie conidio])hores. 
Spores white, cylindrical, oval, oblong, reniform or globose, smooth, producing 
sporidiola or bunches of conidia on germination. Growing on the ground or on 
wood. Rea. 
SUBGENUS: EUSEBACINA Rea. 
(Gr., eu, typical; sebaoina, the genus Sebacina.) 
5511. Sebacina monticola Burt. (L., mons, a mountain; colo, to dwell in). 
“ Fructitication at least 5 cm. long, 1.5 cm. wide, coilaceous, resupinate, cracked, 
dirtv whitish approaching jiale smoke-grey, the margin closely adnate; in section 
200 "to .300 IX thick, with liyphae colourless, 3 to 4 ix in diameter, ascending 
obliquely from substratum to surface, densely crowded together, more intei'woven 
and little incrusted in the lower third of the fructification, but more loosely 
arranged and heavily incrusteil in the whole u}>per two-thii’ds, terminating 
incrusted paraphyses which are either simple or 2-4 branched and with the 
F 
