Appearance
The cap is 6–25 cm in diameter, initially convex in shape before flattening, with a smooth or slightly tomentose surface, and gray-white, white or buff color. The thick flesh is white and does not turn blue when bruised. The pores are initially whitish, later yellow. The spore print is olive brown, the spores are elliptical to spindle-shaped and 13–15 x 4–5 μm in dimensions. The stout stipe is white with a brown reticulated pattern, and may be 6–20 cm high with an apical diameter of 2–6 cm. Like "B. edulis", it is often found eaten by maggots. It has a strong odor while drying.Naming
It was officially described by American mycologists Harry D. Thiers and Alexander H. Smith in 1976 from a specimen collected near Jacob Lake, Arizona, on August 21, 1971, by amateur mycologist Charles "Chuck" Barrows, who had studied the mushroom in New Mexico. It was previously held to be a white colour form of "Boletus edulis". A 2010 molecular study found that "B. barrowsii" was sister to a lineage that gave rise to the species "B. quercophilus" of Costa Rica and "B. nobilissimus" of eastern North America.In addition to "B. edulis", the species could also be confused with the similarly pale-capped "Boletus satanas", though the flesh of the latter stains blue when cut or bruised, and it has a reddish stem and pores. The latter species is poisonous when raw.Distribution
The white king bolete is ectomycorrhizal, found under ponderosa pine inland, and coast live oak closer to the west coast. Fruit bodies appear after rain, and will be more abundant if this occurs in early autumn rather than later in the year through to winter. It is abundant in the warmer parts of its range, namely Arizona and New Mexico, but also occurs in Colorado, west into California and north to British Columbia. It has been recorded from the San Marcos Foothills in Santa Barbara County.Habitat
The white king bolete is ectomycorrhizal, found under ponderosa pine inland, and coast live oak closer to the west coast. Fruit bodies appear after rain, and will be more abundant if this occurs in early autumn rather than later in the year through to winter. It is abundant in the warmer parts of its range, namely Arizona and New Mexico, but also occurs in Colorado, west into California and north to British Columbia. It has been recorded from the San Marcos Foothills in Santa Barbara County.References:
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