110 BULLETIN OF THE NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 
Woods. New England, Fvos¢. 
The thin pileus and long slender stem readily distinguish 
this species. 
Boletus auriporus Px. 
GOLDEN-PORE BOLETUS 
Rep. 23, p. 133 
Pileus convex or nearly plane, glabrous or merely prui- 
nose-tomentose, grayish-brown, yellowish-brown or reddish- 
brown, flesh white, unchangeable; tubes plane or slightly 
depressed around the stem, adnate or subdecurrent, drzghi 
golden-yellow, retatning their color when dried ; stem equal or 
slightly thickened at the base, vzsczd or glutznous when mozst, 
especially toward the base, colored like ora little paler than 
the pileus; spores .0003 to .0004 in. long, .00016 to .o002 
broad. 
Pileus 1 to 3 in. broad; stem 1 to 3 in. long, 2 to 4 lines 
thick. 
Thin woods and shaded banks. New York, Peck. New 
England, Frost. 
This species is remarkable for the rich yellow color of the 
tubes, which is retained unchanged in the dried specimens, 
and for the viscid stem. This character, however, is not 
noticeable in dry weather and was overlooked in the origi- 
nal specimens. 
Boletus glutentpes Frost Ms. is not distinct. 
Boletus innixus Frost 
RECLINING BOLETUS 
Bull. Buff. Soc. 1874, p. 103 
Pileus convex or nearly plane, glabrous, yellowish-brown, 
slightly areolated when old, yellow in the interstices, flesh 
