Boletus citriniporus

Boletus citriniporus

Boletus citrinoporus © Fred Stevens
(Photo: © Fred Stevens)

Boletus citriniporus Halling
Mycologia 69: 206-210.

Common Name: none

  • Pileus

    Cap 4-8 cm broad, convex, broadly so in age; margin at first incurved, then decurved; surface matted tomentose to appressed squamulose, sometimes faintly cracked in older specimens; color dark-brown; context white, firm, moderately thick, unchanging when injured; odor and taste mild.

  • Hymenophore

    Tubes 0.5-1.0 cm long, adnate, bright yellow; pores 1-2/mm, unchanging when bruised, colored like the tubes.

  • Stipe

    Stipe 4-7 cm long, 1-3 cm thick, solid, equal, subventricose, to slightly clavate, narrowed at the base; surface often yellowish at the apex and sometimes faintly reticulate, elsewhere subglabrous, pallid to pale dingy buff.

  • Spores

    Spores--Halling: "(10.5) 12-13.5 x 3.75-4.5 µm, subfusiform and inequilateral in profile, often with a conspicuous suprahilar depression, elliptical to fusiform elliptical in face view".

  • Habitat

    Solitary to grouped under oaks (Quercus); in our area under coast live oak (Quercus agrifolia); fruiting from after the fall rains to mid-winter.

  • Edibility

    Unknown.

  • Comments

    This handsome, uncommon bolete is characterized by a dry, dark-brown cap and bright yellow pores. Its relatively small size and oak habit are also important identifying characters. According to Halling, Boletus citriniporus closest relative in California is B. flaviporus. The latter also has bright yellow pores, but can be distinguished by a viscid, reddish-brown to cinnamon-brown cap.

  • Other Descriptions and Photos

    • Bessette et al. (2000): p. 105 (D), p. 289 (CP)

    (D=Description; I=Illustration; P=Photo; CP=Color Photo)

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