Boletus rex-veris D. Arora & Simonini
spring king bolete
Boletaceae

Species account author: Ian Gibson.
Extracted from Matchmaker: Mushrooms of the Pacific Northwest.

Introduction to the Macrofungi

Photograph

© Michael Beug     (Photo ID #89737)


Map

E-Flora BC Static Map

Distribution of Boletus rex-veris
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Species Information

Summary:
Features include a dry reddish brown cap, when young with a fine white bloom, white unstaining flesh, pores that are whitish at first becoming yellow or yellowish buff and finally greenish, the pores sometimes becoming cinnamon brown near cap margin, dry white-reticulate club-shaped stem that is white when young, often developing brownish tinges when old, and spring growth in the mountains. The description is derived from Arora(2). This species has been referred to as Boletus pinophilus Pilat & Dermek and as its synonym Boletus pinicola (Vittad.) A. Venturi, but that European species is considered by some authors to be somewhat different. Bessette(3) describes as "widely distributed throughout North America" a taxon under the name Boletus pinophilus Pilat & Dermek (with spores given as 15-20 x 4-6 microns). Arora(2) say that the spores of B. rex-veris are slightly narrower than those of the European Boletus pinophilus, but Snell(6) found that spores of dried collections of Boletus edulis subsp. pinicola sent to them from California, Montana, Wyoming and Colorado were somewhat wider and longer (otherwise fitting the European descriptions). Whereas the European descriptions gave the spores as 14-17 x 4.5-5.5 microns, 13-17.5 x 4.5-6 microns etc., they found the spores of the specimens on the whole slightly larger: 14-21 x 5-6 microns, with a few 7 microns wide, mostly 16-18 x 5.5-6 microns, with a tendency for the majority to vary in length directly with the size of the specimens. (Snell(6)). Nevertheless, sequencing of a Washington "spring king" indicated that it was Boletus rex-veris (M. Beug, pers. comm.).
Microscopic:
spores (14)15-17(19) x (4)4.5-5(5.2) microns, elliptic-subfusiform with prominent suprahilar depression, yellowish; basidia 4-spored, (40)45-60(65) x 9-11.5 microns, clavate; pleurocystidia (45)50-65 x 6.5-7.5 microns, cylindric-fusiform, colorless, cheilocystidia (30)45-70 x 11-17 microns, "clavate, sometimes narrowing or with capitulum or wide-fusiform"; cap cuticle an interwoven trichoderm, often weakly gelatinized when old but typically not gelatinized when young, made up of chains of cells with cylindric end cells having sharpened or rounded tips, (20)30-80(128) x (6.5)8-14(20) microns
Spore Deposit:
olive-brown
Notes:
Collections were examined from CA and OR by Arora(2). In CA it is locally abundant in the mountains, fruiting in April-June at mid-elevations (3000-4000 feet) and into July at higher elevations (up to 7000 feet), occurring at somewhat lower elevations in Cascades of OR and WA, extending east through the Blue Mountains to ID and perhaps beyond, and north to BC, outside of California also fruiting principally in spring or early summer, (Arora(2)).
EDIBILITY
yes (Arora)

Habitat and Range

SIMILAR SPECIES
Boletus pinophilus of Europe has a more highly gelatinized cap cuticle, a browner stem, and slightly broader spores, (Arora(2) but see also comments in NOTES). Spores of Boletus pinicola Vitt. of Europe (with synonym B. pinophilus Pilat and Dermek) are 14-17 x 4.5-5.5 microns, (Moser(1)). See also SIMILAR section of Boletus edulis and Boletus ''pinophilus''.
Habitat
scattered to gregarious or clustered under mountain conifers, especially Pinus ponderosa (Ponderosa Pine), Pinus contorta (Lodgepole Pine), and Abies spp., often buried in needle duff beneath understory shrubs

Synonyms

Synonyms and Alternate Names:
Sarcosphaera crassa (Santi) Pouzar
Sarcosphaera eximia (Durieu & Lev.) Maire