BOLETI OF THE UNITED STATES 125 
Var. Jevipes. Stem reticulated above, even below. 
milews 2 £003 in, broad, stem 2 to 3 in. long, 3 to 6 lines 
thick. | 
Woods of frondose trees. New York, Peck. 
The stem is generally more highly colored than the pileus 
and retains its color better. The species is allied to Boletus 
calopus Fr., from which it is separated by its red expallent 
pileus, its stem yellow at the top and by its longer spores. 
Boletus calopus Fr. 
BEAUTIFUL-STEMMED BOLETUS 
Hym. Eur. p. 506. Syl. Fung. Vol. VI, p. 24 
Pileus globose, then convex, unpolished, sbéomentose, olt- 
vaceous, flesh pallid, slightly changing to blue when wounded; 
tubes adnate, their mouths minute, angular, yellow; stem 
firm, conical, then elongated and subequal, reticulated, 
wholly scarlet or at the apex only, sometimes colored like the 
pileus toward the base; spores fusiform, yellowish-brown, 
.00028 to .00032 in. long, .00012 to .oo016 broad. 
Pileus 2 to 3 in. broad; stem longer than the diameter of 
the pileus. 
Woods. North Carolina, Schwezuztz, Curtes. Pennsyl- 
vania, Schweznztz. New England, Sprague, Bennet. 
Boletus ornatipes Px. 
ORNATE-STEMMED BOLETUS 
Rep. 29, p. 67. Boletus retipes, Rep. 23, p. 132 
Pileus convex, firm, dry, glabrous or very minutely to- 
mentose, erayzsh-brown or yellowish-brown, flesh yellow or 
pale-yellow; tubes adnate, plane or concave, rarely convex, 
the mouths small or medium size, clear-yellow; stem firm, 
subequal, distinctly and beautifully reticulated, yellow with- 
