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Gyroporus cyanescens, commonly known as the bluing bolete or the cornflower bolete among green grass
Reddish-brown bitter bolete (Tylopilus rubrobrunneus) in late-afternoon sunlight, summer. In the Connecticut woods.
Lurid bolete in forest grass
mushroom on the forest floor
The Devils Bolete (Rubroboletus satanas) is a poisonous mushroom , an intresting photo
Boletus erythopus or Neoboletus luridiformis mushroom in the forest growing on green grass and wet ground natural in autumn season. Boletus luridiformis is edible mushroom after longer cooking.
King Bolete, Porcini, Boletus edulis, Butano State Park, California.
White mushroom in the dark forest. (Boletus edulis)
Porcini mushroom in forest.
Suillellus luridus (formerly Boletus luridus), commonly known as the lurid bolete with forest trees in the background
Beautiful boletus mushroom in autumn forest
The Bitter Beech Bolete (Caloboletus calopus) , an intresting photo
An Orange Birch Bolete (Leccinum versipelle) toadstool growing among moss in central Scotland. This species, in common with many other Boletus fungi, is a prized edible species and the object of attention of local fungi-foragers in this part of the world.
Suillellus luridus (formerly Boletus luridus), commonly known as the lurid bolete with forest trees in the background
poisonous mushroom
Porcini Mushroom, Edible Mushroom, Boletus edulis
Mushroom at Lake O'Hara in 1997. From old film stock.
Devil's bolete (Boletus satanas) toxic mushroom in the forest, closeup shot
European forest mushrooms
A small Scarletina bolete (Neoboletus erythropus) in the summer
Boletus erythropus (Fr. ex Fr.) Secr. Flockenstieliger Hexenröhrling Céklatinóru Bolet à pied rouge Cap 8–20cm, bay to snuff-brown with olivaceous tints, tending to yellowish ochre towards the margin, slightly velvety at first, soon becoming smooth and sometimes slightly viscid when wet, bruising blue-black. Stem 45–145 x 20–50mm, robust, yellowish densely covered in red dots. Flesh yellow, immediately dark blue on cutting. Taste and smell not distinctive. Tubes lemon-yellow then greenish, becoming dark blue on cutting. Pores small, round, orange-red becoming rusty with age, readily bruising dark blue to black. Spore print olivaceous snuff-brown. Spores subfusiform 12–15 x 4–6µ. Habitat in coniferous, broad-leaved and mixed woodland. Season late summer to autumn. Common. Edible only when cooked, can cause gastric upsets. Distribution, America and Europe (source R. Phillips).
Close-up shot of edible Neoboletus luridiformis - commonly known as scarletina bolete. Czech Republic, Europe.
One toadstool growing in grass on an Autumn morning in rural south west Scotland
Neoboletus luridiformis known as Boletus luridiformis - edible mushroom. Fungus in the natural environment. English: dotted stem bolete
Two king bolete (Boletus edulis) mushrooms growing in the Alaskan wilderness. The King Bolete (Boletus edulis) is a delicious, meaty mushroom, the most sought-after edible bolete. It grows in the Northern Hemisphere, consider delicacy by many European nations, being served either dried (in a soup) or marinated.
Fungi growing in the damp woodland
Mushrooms orange-cup bolete in moss
Common boletus (lat. Léccinum scábrum), Common names: boletus, birch cap, blackhead, obabok. A spongy cap mushroom of the genus Leccinum, or obabok of the Boletaceae family. Forest mushroom hidden in the short grass.
Porcini mushroom , wide angle closeup
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