Comprehensive Description
provided by North American Flora
Boletinus berkeleyi Murrill, Mycologia 1:6. 1909
Boletus decipiens Berk. & Curt. Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. II. 12 : 430. 1853. Not B. decipiens Schrad.
1794. Boletinus decipie^is Peck, Bull. N. Y. State Mus. 8 : 78. 1889.
Pileus convex above, nearly plane below, becoming somewhat irregular on expanding, 7-9 cm. broad, about 3 cm. thick at the center ; surface dry, minutely silky, slightly scaly on the disk, whitish-yellow or dirty yellowish-brown, sometimes faintly speckled ; margin acute, entire, appendiculate : context yellow, taste mild ; tubes scarcely decurrent, adnate, plane or somewhat concave in mass, yellow, becoming brownish-yellow with age : spores rather small, oblong, ochraceous-ferruginous, 8-10X3-4^: stipe equal, usually curved, tapering below, brownish-yellow, subfloccose to glabrous, solid or spongy and yellow within, 5-8 cm. long, 0.7-1.5 cm. thick; veil floccose, evanescent, adhering partly to the margin and partly to the summit of the stipe in the form of a slight annulus.
Type locality : South Carolina.
Habitat : Thin woods.
Distribution: New Jersey to Florida and west to Kentucky.
- bibliographic citation
- William Alphonso MurrilI, Gertrude Simmons BurIingham, Leigh H Pennington, John Hendly Barnhart. 1907-1916. (AGARICALES); POLYPORACEAE-AGARICACEAE. North American flora. vol 9. New York Botanical Garden, New York, NY
Suillus decipiens: Brief Summary
provided by wikipedia EN
Suillus decipiens is an edible species of mushroom in the family Suillaceae. First described by Charles Horton Peck in 1889 as Boletinus decipiens, it was transferred to Suillus in 1898 by Otto Kuntze. The fungus is found in southeastern North America, with the northern limit of its range extending to New Jersey.
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