Pine boletus (Leccinum vulpinum)

Eto eto:
  • Pipin: Basidiomycota (Basidiomycetes)
  • Ìpín: Agaricomycotina (Agaricomycetes)
  • Kilasi: Agaricomycetes (Agaricomycetes)
  • Ipin-ipin: Agaricomycetidae (Agaricomycetes)
  • Bere fun: Boletales (Boletales)
  • Idile: Boletaceae (Boletaceae)
  • Ipilẹṣẹ: Leccinum (Obabok)
  • iru: Leccinum vulpinum (Pine boletus)

Ni:

The pine boletus has a red-brown cap, a characteristic unnatural “dark crimson” color, which is especially pronounced in adult mushrooms. In young specimens, the hat is put on the stem “flush”, with age, of course, it opens, acquiring a chased cushion shape. As with the basic model, the size of the hat can be very large, 8-15 cm in diameter (in a good year you can find a larger hat). The skin is velvety, dry. Dense white pulp without a special smell and taste on the cut quickly turns blue, then blackens. A characteristic feature is that, like the oak variety of boletus (Leccinum quercinum), the flesh can darken in places without waiting for the cut.

Layer Spore:

When young, white, then grayish-cream, turning red when pressed.

spore lulú:

Yellow-brown.

Ese:

Up to 15 cm long, up to 5 cm in diameter, solid, cylindrical, thickened towards the bottom, white, sometimes greenish at the base, deep into the ground, covered with longitudinal brown fibrous scales, making it velvety to the touch.

Tànkálẹ:

Aspen boletus occurs from June to early October in coniferous and mixed forests, forming mycorrhiza strictly with pine. It bears fruit especially abundantly (and looks impressive) in mosses. There is a wide variety of information about the prevalence of this type of information: someone claims that Leccinum vulpinum is much less common than the red boletus (Leccinum aurantiacum), someone, on the contrary, believes that there are also quite a lot of pine boletuses during the season, they just collection is not always distinguished from the basic variety.

Iru iru:

Whether it is worth considering Leccinum vulpinum (as well as the oak boletus (Leccinum quercinum) and spruce (Leccinum peccinum) inextricably linked with it) as a separate species, or is it still a subspecies of the red boletus (Leccinum aurantiacum), there is no consensus. So, let’s take it as more interesting: let’s design the pine redhead as a separate species.In fact, the characteristic red-brown (apolitical) color, brown scales on the leg, dark gray spots, clearly visible when cut, and most importantly, pine is more than a satisfactory set of features to describe a species, and many fungi do not even have this.

Lilo

Bẹẹni, boya.

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