96 
HANDBOOK OF 
III. Eesupinatas. Pileus resupinate. 
494. Lentinus pulvinulus. Berk. FI. Tasm. t. 181, /. 10. 
Sacc. Syll. 2506. 
Resupinate, or fixed by tbe vortex, pulvinate (8-20 m.m. diam.) ; 
pileus pallid, smooth, margin sulcate ; gills broad, ochrey-white, 
entire. 
On rotten wood. Tasmania. 
The following species are not to be traced : — 
Lentinus fastigiatus. Fries. 
Lentinus Shannii. Berk. 
Gf.nus 15. FANUS. Fr. Epicr. p. 396. 
Between fleshy and leathery, tough, not woody, drying up, but 
reviving with moisture ; gills thinner than in Lentinus, tough, at 
length coriaceous, unequal, with an entire acute edge; trama 
floccose. 
* Pileus irregular, stem excentric. 
495. Fanus conchatus. Fr. Hym. Fur. 488. Sacc. Syll. 
2519. Cooke Ulus. t. 1149a. 
Pileus fleshy, tough, thin, unequal, excentric and dimidiate 
(2-4 in.), cinnamon, becoming pale, at length squamulose ; stem 
short (t in. long), unequal, pubescent at the base ; gills forming 
decurrent lines on the stem, somewhat branched, whitish, flesh- 
coloured, then och racoons. 
On trunks. N.S. Wales. 
496. Fanus torulosus. Fr. Hym. Eur. 489. Sacc. Syll. 
2521. 
Pileus fleshy, then tough, coriaceous, plane, then infundibuli- 
form or dimidiate, even, flesh-coloured or ochraceous ; stem short, 
oblique, clothed with short down ; gills decurrent, rather distant, 
distinct behind, reddish, then tan-colour. Spores 5-6 x 3 p. 
On trunks. Victoria. Queensland. 
497. Panus rivulosus. Berk. Linn. Journ. xviii., 384. 
Sacc. Syll. 2540. 
Pileus ochraceous, striately cracked, umbilicate, now and then 
lobed (6| c.m. broad) ; stem excentric, striately cracked, at length 
umber (1 c.m. long) ; gills decurrent. 
On trunks. Australia. 
498. Fanus incandescens. B. ft Br. Linn. Trans, n., 55. 
Sacc. Syll. 2541. 
Pileus umbilicate, sometimes inf'undibuliform, smooth, minutely 
virgate; margin involute (7£ c.m. broad). Stem thickened 
upwards, cylindrical below, striate (3| c.m. long, § c.m. thick). 
Gills thin, deeply decurrent. 
On wood. Victoria. Queensland. N.S.Wales. 
