2011 Wrap-Up for Mushroom Observer
Introduction
How To Use
How To Help
Donate
Feature Tracker
Send a Comment

Index A→Z
List Locations
List Projects

Latest:
 Changes by Users
 Images
 Comments
 Features and Fixes

Observations:
 Create Observation
 Sort by Date

Species Lists:
 Create List
 Sort by Date
 Sort by Title

Account:
 Login
 Create Account

Languages:
 Deutsch
 Ελληνικά
 English
 Español
 Français
 Polski
 Português
 Русский

Contributors
Site Stats
Translator’s Note

Colors from Black on White

Powered by:
Ruby on Rails
Preferred browser:
FireFox

Valid XHTML 1.0 Transitional

Observation: Boletus rex-veris Arora & Simonini (20874)
About Boletus rex-veris Arora & Simonini
When: 2009-05-06
Collection location: Jenkinson Lake, El Dorado Co., California, USA [Click for map]
Who: Ron Pastorino (Ronpast)
No herbarium specimen

Notes: These are mature specimens growing well above ground. The caps seem slightly more red than the ones I usually find early in the season that are semi-buried. The reticulation on the stipe is very faint but visible up close.

[admin – Sat Aug 14 02:01:37 +0000 2010]: Changed location name from ‘Jenkinson Lake, El Dorado Co., Ca.’ to ‘Jenkinson Lake, El Dorado Co., California, USA

Proposed Names: Propose Another Name
Proposed Name User Community Vote
  Ronpast   85% (1)   Eye3Eyes3
Recognized by sight

Please login to propose your own names and vote on existing names.

Eye3 = Observer’s choice Eyes3 = Current consensus
Comments: Add Comment

Created: 2009-05-08 02:13:36 WET (+0000)
By: debbie viess (amanitarita)
Summary: ah, a first of the season, red-capped rex-veris! how ironic…

after all of the recent BAMS discussion about red/not red cap coloration, altho your mention of the red being redder than usual is duly noted.

your statement about exposed vs buried caps makes me think that exposed caps are the red ones; they just start out pale (B. edulis does too, and stays pale if it remains buried).
Perhaps the reason that an inordinate amount of pale capped ones are found commercially is due to folks harvesting young buttons specifically? In other words, deliberate slection for the more pale, immature forms.

http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/BayAreaMushrooms/

139559


Created: 2009-05-08 00:13:49 WET (+0000)
Last modified: 2011-03-17 16:28:46 WET (+0000)
Viewed: 147 times, last viewed: 2011-11-19 08:39:09 WET (+0000)
Show Log