Primary Pore Color is: 1- White, Buff, or Light Gray
Showing 81–96 of 134 results
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Leccinum vulpinum (placeholder for coniferous mates)
Bright orange/red cap. White pores age toward brown, & stain brown or red-brown. Flesh stains red, darkening to purple-gray or black.
Read morePhylloporopsis boletinoides (“Gilled Bolete”)
Gills (not pores) are more olive-buff than yellow, rarely stain blue or blue-green. Whitish flesh slowly stains gray & may taste slightly acidic.
Read morePorphyrellus sordidus
Gray- to dark-brown, oft-cracked cap. White cap flesh stains blue-green, sometimes w/reddish tints, & can taste pungent and/or smell unpleasant.
Read moreRetiboletus griseus (“Gray Bolete”)
Likes oak. Dark brown bug holes w/bright yellow stains. White flesh may slowly redden. Coarse yellow-brown netting that darkens w/age. Gray (pale, brownish or dark) cap.
Read moreRetiboletus vinaceipes
Grows with pine. Bugs leave dark brown holes w/bright yellow stains in flesh that may stain slowly red. White-gray, red-staining stem has broad netting that darkens w/age.
Read moreStrobilomyces confusus (“Old Man of the Woods”)
Cap has pointier, more erect scales than the other Old Men. Flesh stains orange-red to orange. Pores start white but quickly age toward gray-black.
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 moreStrobilomyces strobilaceus (“Old Man of the Woods”)
Cap is completely distinctive black scales on white base. Flesh stains pink. Stem is often stringy & useless.
Read moreSuillus acidus (“Sour Cap Suillus”)
Cap ages from pinkish- or yellow-buff to yellow-brown. Cap skin usually tastes acidic. Stem will snap like a twig, is buff- to tan-yellow, & has red-brown dots. Often has a viscid, yellowish ring.
Read moreSuillus albivelatus
Viscid brown (from yellow to red) cap. White flesh ages toward yellow, esp. by the tubes, & may stain reddish. Buff pores age toward yellow or orangey.
Read moreSuillus brevipes (“Short Stalked Bolete”)
Stem is so short (<2″) that the viscid brown (dark to cinnamon, fading w/age) cap can seem to be on the ground.
Read moreSuillus brunnescens (“Western Slippery Jack”)
Viscid, oft-streaked white cap ages to yellow-, lilac- or dark-brown. White stem yellows on top w/age. Cap & stem base bruise red-brown, resolving to brown.
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 flavo-granulatus
Viscid yellow cap ages to pale yellow-tan. Yellow pores can be huge (2.5 mm across). White stem ages to yellow, w/pink-brown dots on the upper portion.