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Boletus subtomentosus.   Click a photo to enlarge it.   back to list

synonyms: SamtigerRöhrling
Boletus subtomentosus Mushroom
Ref No: 7272
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Boletus subtomentosus Mushroom
Ref No: 7341
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Boletus subtomentosus2 Mushroom
Ref No: 7342
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location: North America, Europe
edibility: Inedible
fungus colour: Green, Brown
normal size: 5-15cm
cap type: Convex to shield shaped
flesh: Flesh discolours when cut, bruised or damaged
spore colour: Olivaceous
habitat: Grows in woods, Grows on the ground

Boletus subtomentosus L. ex Fr. SamtigerRöhrling Cap 4–10cm, very velvety, fulvous to pale sepia, darkening where rubbed or bruised. Stem up to 80 x 10–15(20)mm, pale at apex and yellow towards middle sometimes with a wide, coarse, irregular network of dark brick-coloured veins, paler again towards the base. Flesh white in cap with a date-brown line beneath the cuticle, rust above tubes and flushed lemon-yellow in base of stem, hardly blueing or not at all on cutting. Taste and smell not distinctive. Tubes lemon-chrome blueing on exposure to air. Pores large, angular, similarly coloured, bruising blue on handling then fading. Spore print olivaceous snuff-brown. Spores subfusiform-ellipsoid, 9–11.5 x 3.5–4.5µ. Habitat in broad-leaved and mixed woods, particularly with birch. Season autumn. Rare. Edibility unknown. Distribution, America and Europe.

Members' images and comments

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Joseph Schanuel (United States) - 21 October 2012

OLDER SPECIMEN FOUND NEAR OAKS
Boletus subtomentosus2
Marjan Kustera (Yugoslavia) - 23 May 2012

Find and photo taken 20.May 2012.Mountain Jastrebac,Southern Serbia by Marjan Kustera, Mushroom Society of Nis,Serbia
Boletus subtomentosus2
Jo Priestnall (United Kingdom) - 27 June 2011

Sept 2010, Welwyn Garden City, showing cracking of top surface that seems to occur in all older specimens here. Under mature oak trees on verge.
Boletus subtomentosus2
Jo Priestnall (United Kingdom) - 27 June 2011

Sept 2010, Verge in Welwyn Garden City
Boletus subtomentosus2
Marjan Kustera (Yugoslavia) - 31 May 2011

Find in oak woods near Vranje city,Southern Serbia where is very common.In our country, is considered edible fungus. Photo by Marjan Kuštera,Niš,Serbia
Boletus subtomentosus2
Gil Costa (Portugal) - 06 April 2011

I don't know...
Boletus subtomentosus2
Tony Wharton (United Kingdom) - 27 October 2010

Also known as Xerocomus submentosus. Photographed in Piper's Hill Wood, Worcestershire.
Boletus subtomentosus2
Anne Young (United Kingdom) - 05 September 2010

I have been picking this in the woods in Somerset and eating it despite Roger Philips saying that it is inedible. Also, I eat Boletus Pruinatus. I wonder what others' experience is?
Rosemary Bentley (United Kingdom) - 02 November 2009

Here is a group of the fungi near the last one I sent in.
Boletus subtomentosus2
Rosemary Bentley (United Kingdom) - 02 November 2009

I have seen some of these in Surrey on open grass verge.
Boletus subtomentosus2
Lorand Bartho (Hungary) - 05 February 2009

Hungarian name, Molyhos tinoru
Boletus subtomentosus2
Lorand Bartho (Hungary) - 12 December 2008

As its spores mature, the mould that covers the Boletus turns yellow.
Boletus subtomentosus2
Lorand Bartho (Hungary) - 08 December 2008

B. subtomentosus and B. chrysenteron are often covered with mould.
Boletus subtomentosus2
Lorand Bartho (Hungary) - 08 December 2008

Boletus subtomentosus2
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