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SU274068 Lyndhurst, New Forest, Hants
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Arizona, United States
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SO557146. Forest of Dean Gloucestershire
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The Rosy Larch Bolete has a restricted range. Photo from the Monashee Mountains, British Columbia in June.
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Ballan, Victoria, Australia
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SU274068 Lyndhurst, New Forest, Hants
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Suillus bovinusJersey cow mushroom, KuhroerhlingSlo.: kravnjaa, prona lupljivkaDate: Oct. 02. 2009Lat.: 46.40337 Long.: 13.70669Code: Bot_387/2009-5517Habitat: Grassland, former pasture overgrown with scattered Picea abies and some Larix decidua, flat sandy calcareous ground, well settled alluvial deposits, fairly sunny, exposed to direct rain, average temperature deg C, average precipitations ~3.000 mm/year, elevation 960 m (3.150 feet), alpine phytogeographical region.Substratum: mossy soilPlace: Zadnja Trenta valley, near ex Fjori farm house, East Julian Alps, Posoje, Slovenia ECComments: Determination not sure. Surprising, but definitely no Pinus sp. around, but a few young Picea abies at 3-5 m (10 - 16 feet) away and a few large Larix decidua at about 10+ m (30+ feet) away. According to literature it should be mycorrhiza with Pinus sp.?? Unusually strongly decurent pores, cuticle sticky, 5 - 6 specimens in a loose group. Spore print faint, ocker(?). Spore dimensions: 10.0 (SD=0.7) x 4.3 (SD=0.2) micr, n=20. Ref.:G. Pace, Vse o gobah (in Slovene), Mladinska Knjiga (1997), p 269J.Grom, Nae gobe (in Slovene), epna Knjiga, (1981), p 25M.Bon, Pareys Buch der Pilze, Kosmos (2005), p 48R.M.Daehncke, 1200 Pilze in Farbfotos, AT Verlag (2009), p 34R.Lueder, Grundkurs Pilzbestimmung, Quelle & Mayer (2008), p 368
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Found mainly under pines in North America.
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A species of western North America, here in southwestern British Columbia.
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The Slippery White Bolete is a European species, and this is a western North American version.
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Jasper, Canada
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Mamakating, New York, United States
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The Douglas Fir Bolete is common in western North America.
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suotattiAsikkala, Finland2009-09-18
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Ballan, Victoria, Australia
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Suillus tridentinus (Bres.) Sing., syn: Boletus tridentinus Bres.no name, DE: Rostroter Lrchen-RhrlingSlo.: tridentinska lupljivkaDat.: Oct. 2. 2016Lat.: 46.40383 Long.: 13.74545Code: Bot_1011/2016_DSC5338/5408Habitat: Steep mountain slope, southwest aspect, mixed forest, Fagus sylvatica, Picea abies dominant, with scattered Larix decidua trees; in shade, partly protected from direct rain by tree canopies; calcareous, skeletal ground; under thicket of young Picea abies and about 3-4 m from a large Larix decidua tree, however not directly under its canopy; average precipitations ~ 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 4-6 deg C, elevation 860 m (2.820 feet), alpine phytogeographical region.Substratum: soil.Place: Zadnja Trenta valley, next to the trail leading southeast from No. 48. switchback of alpine Vri pass road (Kugy's monument), before the trail passes Milnarica gorge, East Julian Alps, Posoje, Slovenia EC.Comments: This small but beautiful, orange-yellow bolete is widespread but in most regions a rare find. In Slovenia it was once protected and put on Red List. However, it is not listed in our last official document related to fungi protection from 2011. The reason is not known to me. This find is to my knowledge the second known one in the Upper Soa river region. Growing solitary. Relatively young fruitbody. Pileus diameter 4 cm, sticky surface; stipe 4.8 cm long, max diameter 15 mm, firm, not hollow; flesh firm, not bruising, after a day in the refrigerator slightly bluing; smell almost none; taste mild, mushroomy, pleasant; SP abundant, golden-yellow, oac852.Spores smooth. Dimensions: (9,4 [10,5 ; 10,9] 11,9 x 4,1 [4,4 ; 4,6] 4,9 microns; Q = 2,1 [2,3; 2,4] 2,7; N = 40; C = 95%; Me = 10,7 x 4,5 microns; Qe = 2,4. Olympus CH20, NEA 100x/1.25, magnification 1.000 x, oil, fresh material; in water. AmScope MA500 digital camera.Protected according to: Uredba o varstvu samoniklih gliv Uradni list RS, t. 57/1998, z dne 14. 8. 1998 (Regulation of protected wild growing fungi, Official Gazette of Republic Slovenia, no. 57/1998). Priloga 1. Red list, marked by R, denoting a rare species. Herbarium: Mycotheca and lichen herbarium (LJU-Li) of Slovenian Forestry Institute, Vena pot 2, Ljubljana, Index Herbariorum LJFRef.:(1) G. Kibby, British Boletes, Copyright Geoffrey Kibby (2011), p 37. (2) R. Phillips, Mushrooms, Macmillan (2006), p 294. (3) M. Bon, Parey's Buch der Pilze, Kosmos (2005), p 46.(4) S. Buczacki, Collins Fungi Guide, Collins (2012), p 414. (5) G.J. Krieglsteiner (Hrsg.), Die Grosspilze Baden-Wrttembergs, Band 2., Ulmer
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Reported mainly from northern Europe and northern North America. Photo from near Creston, British Columbia.
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Ballan, Victoria, Australia
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Suillus viscidus (L.) Roussel; syn: Boletus laricinus Berkeley, Boletus aeruginascens Secretan ex OpatowskiSticky bolete, DE: Grauer Lrchen-RhrlingSlo.: siva lupljivkaDat.: Oct. 3. 2016Lat.: 46.40543 Long.: 13.74579Code: Bot_1012/2016_DSC5520Habitat: Near mixed wood edge, alpine pasture, in low grass; moderately steep mountain slope, southwest aspect; calcareous, fairy skeletal ground; sunny and relatively warm place; limestone bedrock; average precipitations ~ 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 5-7 deg C, elevation 905 m (3.000 feet), alpine phytogeographical region.Substratum: soil.Place: Zadnja Trenta valley, close to 46. switchback of alpine road to Vri pass, East Julian Alps, Posoje, Slovenia EC.Comments: Suillus viscidus is not a rare find in Slovenia. It is strictly bound to Larix decidua trees and best recognized by large angular pores and the fact that it is, frankly speaking, an ugly mushroom of indefinite color somewhere among dirty white, gray, beige or pale brown. The whole mushroom is like this. When I first found it I didn't take pictures of it because I thought it was already decayed and therefore determination impossible. But already young pilei look like this. There were more than 10 pilei present at the location, mostly solitary, on an area of about 6 by 6 m. All of them grew under the canopies of Larix decidua or close to them. Pilei diameter 3 - 8 cm, surface viscid, cuticle peels very easily; stem 4 - 9 cm tall, 10 - 17 mm in diameter; taste mild, mushroomy; smell indistinctive; SP faint, brownish, oac could not be determined.Spores smooth. Dimensions: 9,5 [10,7 ; 11,2] 12,4 x 4,3 [4,7 ; 4,8] 5,1 microns; Q = 2 [2,3 ; 2,4] 2,6; N = 36; C = 95%; Me = 11 x 4,7 microns; Qe = 2,3. Olympus CH20, NEA 100x/1.25, magnification 1.000 x, oil, fresh material; in water. AmScope MA500 digital camera.Herbarium: Mycotheca and lichen herbarium (LJU-Li) of Slovenian Forestry Institute, Vena pot 2, Ljubljana, Index Herbariorum LJFRef.:(1) J. Breitenbach, F. Kraenzlin, Eds., Fungi of Switzerland, Vol.3. Verlag Mykologia (1991), p 84. (2) G.J. Krieglsteiner (Hrsg.), Die Grosspilze Baden-Wrttembergs, Band 2., Ulmer (2000), p 306. (3) R. Phillips, Mushrooms, Macmillan (2006), p 294. (4) S. Buczacki, Collins Fungi Guide, Collins (2012), p 414.
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Suillus sp.
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/
Brockenhurst, England, United Kingdom
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Horsell Common, Surrey TQ011609
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A False Truffle reported mainly from the Pacific Northwest of North America. Photo from Sunshine Coast of British Columbia.
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