Toadstools, mushrooms, fungi, edible and poisonous; one thousand American fungi

1. BOLETUS INDECISUS, 468 2–3–4. BOLETUS FELLEUS, 460

930 words  |  Chapter 130

=B. aluta´rius= Fr.—_aluta_, tanned leather. =Pileus= convex, then nearly plane, soft, _velvety_, becoming glabrous, _brownish tan color_. =Flesh= almost unchangeable, taste _mild, watery_. =Tubes= depressed around the stem, plane, short, round, white, becoming brownish where wounded. =Stem= solid, bulbous, nearly even, _small, irregular prominences at the top_. =Spores= 14×4µ. =Pileus= 3–4 in. broad. =Stem= 4–5 in. long. Grassy woods. Minnesota, _Johnson_. _Peck_, Boleti of the U.S. West Virginia mountains, 1882–1885. Margins of woods. Cheltenham, Pa. Margins of woods, 1888–1889, grassy woods and margins. _McIlvaine._ Common in West Virginia mountains where it grows with B. felleus, from which it is impossible to distinguish it without tasting. It is delicious when cooked. But I long ago ceased collecting for the table any Boletus questionable for B. felleus. I have been deceived so many times—taken the bitter for the sweet—that, preferring the sweet, I take no chances for the bitter. =B. fel´leus= Bull.—_fel_, gall. Bitter. (Plate CXXII, fig. 2, 3, 4, p. 468.) =Pileus= convex or nearly plane, firm, becoming soft, _glabrous_, even, variable in color, pale-yellowish, grayish-brown, yellowish-brown, reddish-brown or chestnut. =Flesh= white, often changing to flesh color where wounded, taste _bitter_. =Tubes= adnate, long, convex, depressed around the stem, their mouths angular, white, becoming tinged with flesh-color. =Stem= variable, equal or tapering upward, short or long, sometimes bulbous or enlarged at the base, subglabrous, generally reticulated above, colored like or a little paler than the pileus. =Spores= oblong-fusiform, flesh-colored, 12.5–17.5×4–5µ. Var. _obe´sus_. =Pileus= large. =Stem= thick, coarsely and distinctly reticulated nearly or quite to the base. =Pileus= 3–8 in. broad. =Stem= 2–4 in. long, 6–12 lines thick. The variety is large and solitary in its mode of growth. It is remarkable for the coarse reticulations of the stem which extend nearly or quite to the base. After heavy rains the pileus is viscid. It may prove to be a distinct species. The flesh in the American plant does not always assume incarnate hues where wounded. The color of the fresh tubes often changes to a deeper tint where wounded. _Peck_, Boleti of the U.S. West Virginia, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, North Carolina, _McIlvaine_; Indiana, _H.I. Miller_. A very common species in woods and on thin margins, on open grassy places, and about decayed stumps. I saw hundreds of plants, var. obesus, some a foot in diameter, in a wheat stubble near oak woods. One of the most attractive of Boleti. Its cap resembles a handsomely browned cake. Its solidity is inviting; its flesh, generous in quantity, excites appetite. Until one experiences its intense lasting bitter, one clings to it with hope. Even after tasting, it is thrown away with regret. It is not poisonous, but a small piece of one will embitter a whole dish. _McIlvaine_, Bull. Phila. Myc. Center. July, 1898. =B. nigrel´lus= Pk.—blackish. =Pileus= broadly convex or nearly plane, dry, subglabrous, _blackish_. =Flesh= soft, white, unchangeable. =Tubes= plane or convex, adnate, sometimes slightly depressed around the stem, their mouths small, subrotund, whitish becoming flesh-colored, slowly changing to _brown or blackish where wounded_. =Stem= equal, short, _even_, colored like or a little paler than the pileus. =Spores= dull flesh-colored, 10–12×5–6µ. =Pileus= 3–6 in. broad. =Stem= 1.5–2.5 in. long, 6–12 lines thick. Woods and copses. New York, _Peck_. The blackish color of the pileus and stem distinguishes this species. From Boletus alboater Schw., the adnate, flesh-colored tubes will separate it. The surface of the pileus sometimes becomes cracked in areas. _Peck_, Boleti of the U.S. Mt. Gretna, Pa., August, 1898. _McIlvaine._ Another distinguishing mark from B. alboater is the velvety pileus of the latter. B. nigrellus is mild in taste and smell and an excellent species for the table. =B. eccen´tricus= Pk.—eccentric. (Plate CXVI, fig. 1, p. 420.) =Pileus= thick, firm, convex, irregular, glabrous, more or less lobed or wavy on the involute margin, gray or yellowish-gray. =Flesh= white, close-grained, elastic, unchangeable, taste and odor farinaceous. =Tubes= convex, depressed around the stem, not reaching the margin of the pileus, somewhat uneven and pitted on the surface, yellowish-brown, the mouths subangular, at first concolorous, becoming reddish or reddish-purple. =Stem= eccentric, tapering downward, solid, uneven with short irregular shallow grooves or obscure reticulations, tinged with red at the top, grayish below, tinged with red or purple within at the base. =Pileus= 5–10 cm. broad. =Stem= 4–5 cm. long, 3–4 cm. thick at the top. Sandy soil in grassy places in woods. Mt. Gretna, Pa. August and September. The species is well marked by its eccentric stem, thick irregular pileus and the reddish or reddish-purple mouths of the mature tubes. Mr. McIlvaine remarks that when it is cooked it is delicate and savory. _Peck_, Bull. Torrey Bot. Club, No. 27. In commenting upon this new species to the writer, Professor Peck says: “I suspect that the spores of this (B. eccentricus) are pinkish or rosy. If so, it belongs here (in Hyporhodii). If not, it may have to go in the Luridi, or possibly may be made the type of a new tribe.” CARIO´SI—_caries_, rottenness. Stem never reticulated, stuffed with a spongy pith, at length commonly excavated. Tubes at first white, then often yellowish, their mouths minute, round. Fries adds to these characters, “spores white.” But in our species the spores are pale-yellow when shed in a mass on white paper. They are more elliptical in outline than the spores of most Boleti. The character of the stem is peculiar and easily distinguishes the tribe. The exterior is firm, the interior soft and spongy, becoming irregularly hollow or cavernous in the typical species. Flesh unchangeable 1 Flesh quickly changing to blue where wounded B. cyanescens

Chapters

1. Chapter 1 2. Introduction xv 3. 6. Gyromitra esculenta 546 4. 3. strobiliformis 19 5. 7. prolifera (section) 126 6. 4. Amanita rubescens 21 7. 3. Lentinus lepideus 230 8. 6. humile 81 9. 11. infundibuliformis 100 10. 2. multiceps, var. 94 11. 4. fusipes 116 12. 7. niveus 153 13. 4. volemus 180 14. 7. puellaris 208 15. 5. brevipes 219 16. 2. cervinus var. 245 17. 5. prunulus (section) 255 18. 4. subsquarrosa 275 19. 5. armillatus 323 20. 5. campester 332 21. 5. rhodoxanthus (section) 394 22. 4. solidipes (section) 385 23. 3. castaneus 472 24. 5. crassipes 452 25. 4. pallidus 429 26. 4. scaber areolatus 461, 27. 5. edulis 445 28. 1. Boletus indecisus 468 29. 2. Polyporus sulphureus 485 30. 7. Trametes gibbosa 31. 9. Cantharellus lutescens 218 32. 3. Clavaria pistillaris (dark var.) 524 33. 3. formosa 520 34. 2. echinatum 568 35. INTRODUCTION 36. 8. GILLS EMARGINATE, ALSO ADNATE AND HAVING DECURRENT TOOTH. 37. 15. GILLS DECURRENT; CAP UMBILICATE. 38. 5. RING FIBRILLOSE. 39. 10. VOLVA FRIABLE, DISAPPEARING. 40. 2. AMANITA PHALLOIDES (WHITE 7 5. AMANITA FROSTIANA, 16 41. 3. AMANITA PHALLOIDES (BROWN 7 6. GYROMITRA ESCULENTA, 546 42. 2. AMANITA RUBESCENS AND 21 43. 3. AMANITA STROBILIFORMIS, 19 44. 18. Plate XII, fig. 4, p. 32.) =Pileus= about 4 in. broad, 45. 2. AMANITOPSIS VAGINATA, 29 6. MYCENA PROLIFERA, 126 46. 3. AMANITOPSIS NIVALIS, 29 7. MYCENA PROLIFERA 126 47. 4. AMANITOPSIS STRANGULATA, 30 48. 2. LEPIOTA NAUCINOIDES, 45 4. AMANITA RUBESCENS, 21 49. 1. Armillaria mellea, 55 3–4. Lentinus 230 50. 2. Armillaria mellea var. 56 51. 4. TRICHOLOMA TERREUM, 71 52. 4. CLITOCYBE 108 9. CLITOCYBE ODORA, 90 53. 6. CLITOCYBE MAXIMA 99 11. CLITOCYBE 100 54. 7. CLITOCYBE NEBULARIS, 85 55. 1. CLITOCYBE MULTICEPS, 95 2. CLITOCYBE MULTICEPS, 95 56. 2. COLLYBIA PLATYPHYLLA 114 4. COLLYBIA FUSIPES, 116 57. 1. HYGROPHORUS PRATENSIS (WHITE 5. HYGROPHORUS 58. 2. HYGROPHORUS PRATENSIS (COLORED 6. HYGROPHORUS VIRGINEUS, 59. 3. HYGROPHORUS PRATENSIS (AFTER 7. HYGROPHORUS NIVEUS, 60. 4. HYGROPHORUS MINIATUS, 159 61. 146. Plate XXXVIII, p. 147.) =Pileus= 1–2 in. and more broad, somewhat 62. 2. LACTARIUS INDIGO, 171 4. LACTARIUS VOLEMUS, 180 63. 4. RUSSULA SORDIDA, 190 64. 3. CRATERELLUS 508 65. 1. PLUTEUS CERVINUS, 243 2. PLUTEUS CERVINUS, 245 66. 2. CLITOPILUS ABORTIVUS 256 5. CLITOPILUS PRUNULUS 255 67. 3. CLITOPILUS ABORTIVUS 258 68. 7. Stem longer than the width of the zoneless C. albogriseus 69. 7. Stem shorter than the width of the commonly C. micropus 70. 11. Stems not cespitose, hollow C. Seymourianus 71. 1. _Pileus not hygrophanous._ 72. 2. _Pileus hygrophanous._ 73. 1. Spores angulated. C. depluens 74. 2. Pileus striatulate when C. Greigensis 75. 2. Pileus not striatulate C. byssisedus 76. 2. PHOLIOTA CAPERATA, 270 4. PHOLIOTA SUBSQUARROSA, 275 77. 1. CORTINARIUS 318 4. CORTINARIUS TURMALIS, 309 78. 2. CORTINARIUS VIOLACEUS, 314 5. CORTINARIUS 323 79. 3. CORTINARIUS OCHRACEUS, 319 80. 1892. In woods. September to frost. _McIlvaine._ 81. 2. AGARICUS SILVICOLA, 343 5. AGARICUS CAMPESTER 332 82. 3. AGARICUS PLACOMYCES, 345 83. 2. HYPHOLOMA PERPLEXUM, 354 4. GOMPHIDIUS RHODOXANTHUS, 394 84. 1. Stem solid or stuffed, flesh whitish, gills sublateritium 85. 2. Cap yellow or tinged with tawny, stem yellow, fasciculare 86. 2. Cap brick-red, stem ferruginous, gills green, elæodes 87. 3. Cap red or brick-red, with a yellow margin; gills perplexum 88. 4. Gills yellow, becoming gray, neither green nor epixanthum 89. 2. COPRINUS MICACEUS, 378 4. PANAEOLUS SOLIDIPES 385 90. 3. Pileus soon red-squamose B. pictus 91. 1. Tubes yellowish with reddish, or 92. 2. Stem lacunose-reticulated and 93. 4. Tubes free, or if adnate then 94. 4. Tubes adnate, not stuffed when 95. 6. Tubes free or nearly so, 96. 7. Stem spongy within, soon cavernous 97. 11. Tubes yellowish or stuffed when 98. 11. Tubes whitish, not stuffed. (p. 459.) Versipelles 99. 1. Stem dotted both above and below the 100. 13. Pileus adorned with tufts of hairs or 101. 14. Stem whitish or yellowish-white 102. 17. Pileus some other color B. collinitus 103. 22. Taste acrid or peppery B. piperatus 104. 2. BOLETUS SUBAUREUS, 414 105. 3. BOLETUS FULVUS, 465 106. 1. Tubes free, with red mouths B. auriflammeus 107. 2. Stem pallid, with a circumscribing red B. glabellus 108. 2. Stem yellow, sometimes with red stains B. 109. 6. Pileus reticulated with subcutaneous brown B. dictyocephalus 110. 8. Stem yellowish, streaked with brown B. innixus 111. 3. BOLETUS RUBROPUNCTUS, 429 112. 1. Flesh or tubes changing to blue where 2 113. 6. Tube mouths minute B. spadiceus 114. 3. BOLETUS ILLUDENS, 439 115. 1. Stem red in the depressions, tubes tinged with B. Morgani 116. 1. Stem pale-yellow, tubes not greenish B. Betula 117. 9. Pileus gray or grayish-black, stem straight B. griseus 118. 3. Tubes tinged with green or becoming green where 6 119. 8. Stem even, brownish-red B. decorus 120. 1898. _McIlvaine._ 121. 7. Pileus reddish-tawny or brown B. Sullivantii 122. 2. Margin of the pileus B. versipellis 123. 3. Stem scabrous or B. scaber 124. 4. Pileus dark-brown B. sordidus 125. 1. Stem slender, generally less than four B. 126. 3. Tubes round, white B. 127. 4. Taste mild B. 128. 4. Taste bitter B. felleus 129. 1898. The stem of some specimens spreads at the top. The pileus is often 130. 1. BOLETUS INDECISUS, 468 2–3–4. BOLETUS FELLEUS, 460 131. 1. Pileus granulated B. Murray 132. 1. FISTULINA HEPATICA, 477 2. POLYPORUS SULPHUREUS, 485 133. 2. POLYSTICTUS VERSICOLOR. } About natural 134. 4. POLYPORUS PERENNIS AND } 135. 7. TRAMETES GIBBOSA. } 136. 1897. =Cap= and =stem= dark brown. =Spines= darker. =Stem= swelling 137. 2. PEZIZA COCCINEA, 559 7. CRATERELLUS SINUOSUS, 510 138. 3. PEZIZA AURANTIA, 557 8. CRATERELLUS 509 139. 5. HYPOMYCES LACTIFLUORUM, 562 140. 2. CLAVARIA AUREA, 520 141. 1. CLAVARIA FUSIFORMIS, 523 3. CLAVARIA PISTILLARIS 524 142. 2. CLAVARIA PISTILLARIS 524 143. 1894. The mass was 2 in. in diameter. Separating them was taking the 144. 1. PHALLUS. Page 571. 145. 2. MUTINUS. Page 575. 146. 3. CLATHRUS. 147. 4. SIMBLUM. 148. 5. LATERNEA. 149. 1. POLYPLOCIUM. 150. 2. BATARREA. 151. 3. MYRIOSTOMA. 152. 4. GEASTER. Page 580. 153. 5. ASTRÆUS. 154. 6. MITREMYCES. 155. 7. TYLOSTOMA. Page 582. 156. 8. CALVATIA. Page 582. 157. 9. LYCOPERDON. Page 589. 158. 10. BOVISTELLA. Page 608. 159. 11. CATASTOMA. Page 609. 160. 12. BOVISTA. Page 610. 161. 13. MYCENASTRUM. Page 613. 162. 1. Having washed and cleansed them from the earth which is apt to 163. 2. MORELLES A L'ITALIENNE.—Having washed and dried, divide them across, 164. Introduction, xv

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