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Distinguishing Characters:
Boletoid stature; pileus yellowish, pallid yellowish brown to pallid brown,
glabrous, glutinous; pore surface yellowish, depressed to subdecurrent; stipe
conspicuously glandulose, whitish background with yellowish apex,
vinaceous stains developing toward base; veil lacking; spores ellipsoid
to subcylindric, smooth, 7.6-9.5 x 3.2-4.5 µm; growing in association
with conifers, especially Ponderosa pine - Pinus ponderosa P. & C. Lawson.
Compare: Suillus granulatus - pileus
brown, reddish brown to dark brown; spores 7.0-9.0 x 2.5-3.5 µm (reported
from Arizona and other parts of the Southwest). Suillus occidentalis - stipe not conspicuously gladulose;
spores 8.0-9.6 x 3.0-4.0 µm (reported from Arizona). Suillus wasatchicus
- pore surface covered in
conspicuous reddish glandulae, particularly noticeable when immature;
stipe lacking vinaceous stains toward base; spores 8.0-10.4 x 1.5-2.0
µm (reported from Arizona and other parts of the Southwest).
Citations
Bassette, A.E., W.C. Roddy and A.R. Bessette.
2000. North American Boletes: A Color Guide to the Fleshy Pored
Mushrooms. Syracuse University Press, Syracuse
Bates, S.T. 2006. A preliminary checklist of
Arizona macrofungi. Canotia 2: 47-78
Thiers, H.D. 1975. California Mushrooms: A
Field Guide to the Boletes. Hafner Press, New York
Thiers, H.D. 1976. Boletes of the Southwestern
United States. Mycotaxon 3: 261-273 |