T A B. CCXXVI. 



BOLETUS ALBiDus. Sckcf. tab. 124. 



xV VERY tender fpccies. When frcfli, it cannot be 

 touched, however gently, without Ihewing the bruife, 

 by immediate!)' turning bkie. The Rev. Ah-. Ilcm- 

 fted has fent it me fcveral times from the neigh- 

 bourhood of Newmarket, and I have found it on the 

 Croydon road, and at Ilainault forelT:. It feldom pro- 

 duces good fpecimens, and is frequently indilHnd, as 

 exhibited in Schacffer's figures. The pores are fmall, 

 and fometimes irregular. 



T A B. CCXXVII. 



BOLETUS SALiciNus. Bull. t. 433.7?^. i. 

 A LB us. Hudf. 626. 



1 HIS mortly inliabits the upper part of old willow 

 flumps, while the Boletus fuaveoleus feems to grow 

 on the lower part. I cannot very readily dillinguifli 

 between them. The upper plants grow more fepa- 

 rate and regular, with fliort tubes and fmall pores. 

 The whole at firl!: beautifully white, afterwards be- 

 comes yellowilh, and lalUy of a browner hue. 



T A B. CCXXVI 1 1. 



BOLETUS suAVEOLEUs. Linn. EnJJin. dijf. t. 6. p. 32. 



1 DO not know any other figure of this plant than the 

 above. Bulliard, tab. 310, furely reprefcnts .\. guercinus 

 of this work, tab. 18 1 , variety Boletifonniw Our ])]ant, 

 as obferved in the lafi: paragraph, grows generally at 

 the bottom of decajdng willows, commonly tiled with 

 much irregularity. '1 he tubes are generally fliort, 

 but both they and the pores are irregular, commonly 

 mixed with grafs and other herbage. When frelli it 

 is very white, and changes but little, as infects fooner 



