Polyporaceae 



Boletus. European B. sphaerocephalus has ovoid spores, but its tube mouths are 

 minute and rotund and its stem is densely squamose. Peck, Boleti of 

 the U. S. 



B. lu'teilS L. yellow. Pileus gibbous or convex, covered wiih a 

 brownish separating gluten, becoming yellowish-brown and virgate- 

 spotted. Flesh white. Tubes adnate, minute, simple, yellow, becom- 

 ing darker with age. Stem stout, yellowish and dotted above the large 

 membranous brownish-white annulus, brownish-white or yellowish below. 

 Spores fusiform, yellowish-brown, 6-7x3-4^. 



Pileus 2-5 in. broad. Stem 1-2 in. long, 6-IO lines thick. 



Pine woods and groves. New York, Peck. 



B. luteus has an international reputation for edibility. I have found it 

 at Waretown and Haddonfield, N. J. ; in Bartram's Garden, West Phila- 

 delphia, always under pines. At Waretown it was gregarious. Pine 

 needles, sand, anything through which it grows, adheres to the glutin- 

 ous cap. It must be carefully cleaned before cooking. It is then of 

 choice consistency and good flavor. 



(Plate CXV.) 



B. SUblu'teus Pk. luteus, yellow. Pileus convex or nearly plane, 



viscid or glutinous when moist, often 

 obscurely virgate-spotted, dingy-yel- 

 lowish, inclining to rusty-brown. 

 Flesh whitish, varying to dull-yel- 

 lowish. Tubes plane or convex, ad- 

 nate, small, subrotund, yellow be- 

 coming ochraceous. Stem equal, 

 slender, pallid or yellowish, dotted 

 both above and below the ring with 

 reddish or brownish glandules ; ring 

 submembranous, glutinous, at first 

 concealing the tubes, then generally 

 collapsing and forming a narrow 

 whitish or brownish band around the 

 stem . Spores subf usiform , ochraceo- 

 1.5-3 in- broad. Stem 1.5-2.5 in. 



SECTION OF BOLETUS SUBLUTEUS, 



ferruginous, 8-10x4-5/4. 

 long, 2-4 lines thick. 



Pileus 



412 



