4. Found in Mississippi
Showing 33–44 of 44 results
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Pulchroboletus rubricitrinus
Some-shade-of-red cap. Yellow stem typically has bright red near the base, with dots/smears but not netting. Slightly acidic flavor. Yellow cap flesh quickly stains blue.
Read moreRetiboletus ornatipes (“Ornate Bolete”)
Bright yellow, heavily textured stem bruises toward orange. Yellow pores bruise yellow-orange. Often tastes bitter.
Read moreStrobilomyces dryophilus (“Old Man of the Woods”)
Cap has grayish pink or darker scales on white base. White flesh stains orange/pink before slowly darkening. Lighter, shaggy stem is often stringy & useless. Likes oak.
Read moreSuillellus hypocarycinus (“Hickory Bolete”)
Yellow flesh & orange-red pores quickly blue. White to yellow stem (yellow high) speckled red, esp. low. Brown to yellow-brown cap.
Read moreSuillus cothurnatus (“Booted Suillus”)
Marbled orange-buff-yellow cap flesh stains dark purple-drab. Yellow pores age brownish & DNS
Read moreSuillus decipiens
Small, hairy/scaly, variable-color cap has an incurved edge, bruises dark gray & flattens w/age. Almost-veined, radial yellow pores age browner & DNS or stain brownish.
Read moreSuillus elbensis
Variable-colored, viscid cap. Stem is buff above the viscid ring, & grayish-brown below. Whitish pores & pale flesh both stain blue-green, sometimes slowly, usually shifting 1st to purple-gray & then red-brown.
Read moreSuillus grisellus (“Grayish Suillus”)
White/gray/brown pores run down stem (decurrent) & DNS. Likes sphagnum moss under larch, usually in wetlands.
Read moreTylopilus alboater (“Black Velvet Bolete”)
Velvety black cap. Oft-swollen or bulbous stem echoes the cap color. Pores & white cap flesh usually stain pink, then become dark.
Read moreTylopilus plumbeoviolaceus (“Violet Gray Bolete”)
Purplish stem is marbled or streaked w/white, & browns w/age. Cap is similar but browner, often w/a whitish bloom. Bitter, white cap flesh DNS.