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synonyms: SamtigerRöhrling |
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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 |
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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. |
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Members' images and comments
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Tony Wharton (United Kingdom) - 27 October 2010

Also known as Xerocomus submentosus. Photographed in Piper's Hill Wood, Worcestershire.
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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?
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Rosemary Bentley (United Kingdom) - 02 November 2009

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

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

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

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

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

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