Boletes - Fleshy texture, stems central (more-or-less)


 

The fungi in this sub-group produce fruitbodies that, until you look below the cap could be mistaken for mushrooms. However, instead of gills below the cap there are pores. In fungal field guides you will find these fungi referred to collectively as boletes. In boletes the cap is quite thick in relation to its diameter. In some boletes the flesh or pores may turn blue when damaged, in others there is no colour change and bolete identification keys ask about this.

 

In the following hints you see examples of useful identification features and a few of the more commonly seen genera in which at least some species (not necessarily all) show those features.

 

Hints

Cap over 30 cm in diameter: Phlebopus.

Very soft texture, like marshmallow: Fistulinella.

Red cap, yellow pores: Boletellus.

Growing near pine trees: Suillus.

Growing near birch trees: Leccinum.

Stem deeply pitted, somewhat honeycomb-like: Austroboletus.

 


Boletes - Fleshy texture, stems central (more-or-less)

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Discussion

Heino1 wrote:
28 Nov 2024
Perhaps a species of Pulveroboletus

bolete
Heino1 wrote:
27 Nov 2024
I suspect this is Boletellus deceptivus but, given my unfamiliarity with that species, I've left this sighting as Boletellus sp. for now.

Boletellus sp.
Heino1 wrote:
5 Aug 2024
One of fruitbodies (a little below the centre of the photo) has a chew hole and through that hole you can see evidence of the pores that are on the underside of the cap in this species.

Filoboletus manipularis
Heino1 wrote:
5 Aug 2024
Even without a view of the underside this is recognizable given the numerous dots on the cap surface. The underside of the cap has pores (not gills) and the cap tissue is so thin that evidence of the pores shows through as those dots. See Filoboletus manipularis for top and bottom views of this species.

Filoboletus manipularis
Teresa wrote:
29 Jul 2024
Possibly a Bolete sp.

Boletellus sp.

Recent activity

Boletellus sp. at Pillar Valley, NSW

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