September 4th,
2016. We’ve had a particularly dry summer. Some of the mushrooms that fruit
during early summer didn’t appear this year. Thunderstorms have brought some
rain recently and it seems that some of the late summer fungi are going to make
an appearance. These include mushrooms of various types.
Mushrooms, in
contrast to other fungi, have a cap and a stem.
We usually think of
mushrooms as having gills from which spores are released to perpetuate the species.
However, mushrooms may also have pores or teeth.
Boletes are
mushrooms that have pores instead of gills. Pores are simply small tubes in the cap
from which spores are released.
When the boletes
were first described by Chevallier in 1826, the family (Boletaceae) included five genera. In the most recent review of the
family (Wu, 2014), 59 genera were recognized. More genera and species are being added, largely as
a result of nucleic acid sequencing studies that show genetic differences among boletes that are not easily differentiated by other methods.
Although I’m most
interested in bracket fungi, I decided to devote more effort this year to
documenting boletes that I encountered. Some boletes are very easy to identify.
On the whole, however, identifying boletes can be challenging. Many are very
similar in appearance. Thanks to friend on the Boletes of North
America Facebook Group, I’ve been able to identify those that I didn’t
recognize.
Here are the
boletes that I’ve encountered so far – since August 4th - along a one-mile trail, and in order
of my first sighting of the species.
Pulveroboletus ravenelii (Ravenel’s Bolete)
Heimioporus betula (Shaggy-stalked Bolete)
Tylopilus rubrobrunneus (Reddish Brown Bitter Bolete)
Boletus pallidus (Pallid Bolete)
Retiboletus ornatipes (Ornate-stalked Bolete)
Tylopilus plumbeoviolaceus (Violet Gray Bolete)
Exsudoporus frostii (formerly Boletus frostii/Frost’s Bolete)
Tylopilus rhoadsiae (Pale Bitter Bolete)
Such a wonderful
variety of boletes! Makes one look at mushrooms with a completely different
eye, and the reason I may often be found sitting or lying beside the trail
taking photographs.
Note: These are
among the easier boletes to identify. I know I’m going to see more boletes that
will be much more challenging to identify.
References
Wikipedia. Boletaceae.
Facebook Group. Boletes of North
America
Mushroom Expert. Pulveroboletus
ravenelii
Mushroom Expert. Heimioporus betula
Mushroom Expert. Tylopilus
rubrobrunneus
Mushroom Expert. Boletus pallidus
Mushroom Expert. Retiboletus
ornatipes
Mushroom Expert. Tylopilus
plumbeoviolaceus
Mushroom Expert. Boletus frostii
(now Exsudoporus frostii)
Wikipedia. Tylopilus rhoadsiae
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