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BROWN PORED BOLETE

Identifying Your Bolete
6.24

BROWN PORED BOLETE

Boletus vermiculosus
Frequency 
Rare
Inedible
Medium
Size
Habitat Area
Under broadleaf hardwood trees. Boletus vermiculosus is said to be very rare, growing under oaks and beeches. However, we found it frequently in Basse-Mauricie, Quebec, in a mixed forest dominate by conifers.
Cap
Orange to yellow-brown or reddish-brown when young, cinnamon-brown in ag
Margin
Even.
Tubes
Adnate, depressed near the stalk, staining blue rapidly.
Pores and Pore Surface
Mainly red-brown, staining blue when bruised. For Boletus vermiculosus, pore surface is typically brown when young, decoming reddish brown to brownish orange in age. For Boletus vermiculosoides, the pore surface is dark brown when young and paler in age. Pores circular, 2-3 per mm.
Stalk
Nearly equal or enlarging downward, non-reticulate, pale yellow toward the top, orange or reddish at the bottom.
Stalk Feature
Staining blue-black when bruised.
Flesh
Total, rapid colour change to blue. In the stipe, sometimes tints of yellow or brown in the stipe. the flesh invaded by insects larvae take a reddish color.
Chemical reactions
FLESH: towards orange beige with KOH, NaOH; towards gray with FeSO4, towards beige then dark gray with NH4OH; to black with phenol; little reaction with formalin. CAP: towards brown with KOH, NaOH andmNH4OH; to gray or black with FeSO4, phenol and formalin. TUBES: everything turns blackish and the center of the phenol turns white.
Comments 
A first fructification for Boletus vermiculosus, in Shawinigan, Qc. on june twenty 2017. F. Miron, biologist
More photos 
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