
Slippery Jill (Suillus salmonicolor)
Slimy light brown mushrooms at the bottom of a drainage path between two ridges in a dense mixed hardwood forest (with scattered pines). A sticky white to cream colored veil still in tact. Pale yellow (buttery colored) ellipsoid pores. No bruising occurs when cut. Spore print a burnt yellow (difficult to get a print). Some small dotting on the top of the stalk (beneath the veil).

''Suillus salmonicolor'', commonly known as the Slippery Jill, is a fungus in the family Suillaceae of the order Boletales. ''S. salmonicolor'' is a mycorrhizal fungus—meaning it forms a symbiotic association with the roots of plants such that both organisms benefit from the exchange of nutrients.
