AUSTRALIAN FUNGI. 
363 
1898. Glceosporium fructigenum. Berk. Gard. Chron. 1856. 
Sacc. Syll. 3751. 
Pustules concentric, dull rose colour, erumpent, with a single 
pore or a fringed mouth, pulvinate ; conidia oblong or cylindrical, 
often curved, 20-30 X 5-6 y, granular, hyaline ; basidia simple, 
rarely forked. 
On rotting pears. Queensland. 
1899. Glceosporium musarum. Cooke <$- Mass. Grev. xvi., 3. 
Pustules innate-erumpent, gregarious, rather rosy. Conidia, 
elongated, ellipsoid, rounded at the ends, continuous, hyaline, 10- 
12x4 /x, granular within. 
On ripe bananas. Queensland. 
1900. Glceosporium ampelophagum. Pass. Sacc. Syll. 3755. 
Spots rather circular, often confluent, occupying the surface of 
the berries, rufous or dingy, turning black, in the centre grey, or 
rosy-pruinose, pustules nestling beneath the epidermis, minute, 
densely gregarious ; conidia oblong, ellipsoid, or ovoid , 5-6 x 2^- 
3^ jx, biguttulate, hyaline. 
On grapes, rarely on vine leaves or branches. Victoria. 
1901. Glceosporium pestiferum. Cke. <j- Mass. Grev. 
xix., 61. 
Pustules gregarious, subcuticular, small, discoid, convex, rosy. 
Conidia oozing out and forming pink nodules resembling a small 
Tubercularia, cylindrical, rounded at the ends, straight, continuous, 
granular within, hyaline, 14-15 X 3-4 /x. 
On twigs, peduncles, and fruit of Vitis vinifera. Victoria. 
Queensland. 
1902. Glceosporium lagenarium. Pass. Sacc. Syll. 3757. 
Pustules seated beneath the cuticle, erumpent, often circinating, 
minute, pulvinate, somewhat rosy; conidia ovate-oblong, some- 
times unequal-sided, 16-18x5-6 /x, continuous, cloudy, hyaline ; 
basidia fasciculate, rather fusoid, 15-20 x 3-5 /x. 
On the epicarp of melons, etc. Queensland. 
1903. Glceosporium cucurbitarum. B. 4' Br. Linn. Trans. 
it., p. 68. Sacc. Syll. 3758. 
Spots bright orange, depressed, conidia clavate, shortly stipitate, 
10-22 [x long. 
On gourds. Queensland. 
Scarce more than a variety of Glagenarium. 
Genus 36. PESTALOZZIELLA. Sacc. 4- Ell. 
Pustules growing beneath the cuticle, without perithecia. 
Conidia oblong, continuous, somewhat hyaline, crowned at the 
apex with hyaline set®. 
1904. Pestalozziella circulare. Cke. 4' Mass. Grev. 
xviii., 80. 
Developed on both surfaces of the leaves. Pseudo-perithecia 
usually disposed in circles, a little convex, and at length splitting 
