Boletus subvelutipes

Boletus subvelutipes

''Boletus subvelutipes'', commonly known as the red-mouth bolete, is a bolete fungus in the Boletaceae family. It is found in Asia and North America, where it fruits on the ground in a mycorrhizal association with both deciduous and coniferous trees. Its fruit bodies have a brown to reddish-brown cap, bright yellow cap flesh, and a stem covered by furfuraceous to punctate ornamentation and dark red hairs at the base. Its flesh instantly stains blue when cut, but slowly fades to white. The fruit bodies are poisonous, and produce symptoms of gastrointestinal distress if consumed.
Red-mouth Bolete Small bolete growing on the ground in a deciduous forest. The stipe was reddish with some brown streaks. The cap was orange and had some tan around the margin. The stem, flesh, and pores immediately bruised a dramatic blue when I knocked it over. Boletus,Geotagged,Red-mouth Bolete,Summer,United States,bolete,fungus,mushroom

Appearance

The cap is initially convex, but flattens out as it matures, attaining a diameter of 6–13 cm wide. The cap surface is dry, with a velvet-like texture when young, sometimes developing cracks in maturity. The cap color ranges from cinnamon-brown to yellow-brown to reddish brown or reddish orange to orange-yellow. The bright yellow flesh has no distinctive taste or odor, and a taste ranging from mild to slightly acidic. The pore surface on the underside of the cap is variably colored: in young specimens, this ranges from red to brownish red to dark maroon-red, or red-orange to orange; the color fades in older individuals. The circular pores number about 2 per millimeter, and the tubes comprising the hymenophore are 8–26 mm deep. The stem is 3–10 cm long by 1–2 cm thick, and nearly equal in width throughout its length. It is solid with a furfuraceous surface , and mature individuals usually have short, stiff hairs at the base. All parts of the mushroom–cap, pore surface, flesh, and stipe–will quickly stain to dark blue if injured or cut.

''Boletus subvelutipes'' produces a dark olive-brown spore print. Spores are roughly spindle-shaped to somewhat swollen in the middle, smooth, and measure 13–18 by 5–6.5 μm.

The fruit bodies are poisonous, and produce symptoms of gastrointestinal distress if consumed. The mushrooms can be used in mushroom dyeing to produce beige or light brown colors, depending on the mordant used.
Red-mouth Bolete - Boletus subvelutipes Bolete with bright orange pores, a brownish-green cap with bloom, and a stipe that was yellow at the apex, red in the middle, and white towards the base. The flesh and pores bruised blue. Growing on the ground in a deciduous forest.

https://www.jungledragon.com/image/64141/red-mouth_bolete_-_boletus_subvelutipes.html
https://vimeo.com/282900811
 Boletus subvelutipes,Geotagged,Summer,United States,bolete,boletus,fungus,mushroom

Naming

''Boletus gansuensis'', found in the Gansu Province of China, is similar in appearance to ''B. subvelutipes''. The Chinese species can be distinguished by its longer and narrower spores measuring 12.0–15.5 by 6.0–7.0 μm, smaller fruit bodies with a cap diameter of 6–8 cm and shorter tubes up to 1.2 cm deep.
Red-mouth Bolete - Boletus subvelutipes Bolete with bright orange pores, a brownish-green cap with bloom, and a stipe that was yellow at the apex, red in the middle, and white towards the base. The flesh and pores bruised blue. Growing on the ground in a deciduous forest.

https://vimeo.com/282900811 Boletus subvelutipes,Geotagged,Summer,United States,bolete,boletus,red-mouth bolete

Distribution

The fruit bodies of ''Boletus subvelutipes'' grow on the ground singly, scattered, or in groups. A mycorrhizal species, the fungus associates with deciduous trees, typically oak, and also with pines such as hemlock. Fruit bodies have a strong ability to capture and neutralize the chemical methyl mercaptan, one of the main odiferous compounds associated with bad breath. This ability is conferred largely by the pigment variegatic acid.

In North America, its distribution includes eastern Canada and extends south to Florida and west to Minnesota. It is also in Mexico. In Asia, it has also been found in the central highlands of Taiwan and in Japan.

Habitat

The fruit bodies of ''Boletus subvelutipes'' grow on the ground singly, scattered, or in groups. A mycorrhizal species, the fungus associates with deciduous trees, typically oak, and also with pines such as hemlock. Fruit bodies have a strong ability to capture and neutralize the chemical methyl mercaptan, one of the main odiferous compounds associated with bad breath. This ability is conferred largely by the pigment variegatic acid.

In North America, its distribution includes eastern Canada and extends south to Florida and west to Minnesota. It is also in Mexico. In Asia, it has also been found in the central highlands of Taiwan and in Japan.

References:

Some text fragments are auto parsed from Wikipedia.

Taxonomy
KingdomFungi
DivisionBasidiomycota
ClassAgaricomycetes
OrderBoletales
FamilyBoletaceae
GenusBoletus
SpeciesB. subvelutipes