Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Suillus tomentosus
Species of fungus From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Suillus tomentosus is a species of mushroom. The common names of the species are blue-staining slippery jack, poor man's slippery Jack, and woolly-capped suillus. It is edible for most people, but may cause gastric upset in others and it resembles poisonous species.
Remove ads
Description
The cap is 5–12 cm (2–4+3⁄4 in) wide,[1] pale to orange-yellow with grayish brownish or reddish tomentum, and viscid while fresh.[2] The fibrillose-scaly surface of the cap helps distinguish it from other species in the genus.[3] The tubes are yellow and become blue when bruised.[4] It has no veil.[2] The stipe is 3–11 cm (1–4+1⁄2 in) tall and 1–3 cm wide,[1][5] glandular dotted and the color is similar to the cap.[2]
The spore print is dark olive brown to brown.[6] The spores are brownish when they are young.[7] The species stains fingers blue.[8] The yellow interior of the mushroom should slowly turn green-blue when cut with a knife.[9]
Similar species
Similar species include S. fuscotomentosus,[1] S. reticulatus, S. variegatus,[7] and Boletus subtomentosus.[1]
Remove ads
Distribution and habitat
The species is commonly found in the Rocky Mountains of Idaho and the Pacific Northwest. It is less common in the lake states. The species fruits in the summer in the Rockies and in autumn along the Pacific coast and in the lake states.[4][5] The species is by itself or scattered in mixed forests.[10] The species can commonly be found under lodgepole pines or other two-needle pines. It is rarely found under jack pines.[11]
Suillus tomentosus forms tuberculate ectomycorrhizae (mycorrhizae that are nodular) with lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta var. latifolia). Recent work has shown that acetylene is reduced by the nodules which means that nitrogen is being fixed by bacteria within the nodules.[12][13] This system is functionally similar to the root nodules in legumes like clover. Lodgepole pine can be found growing on gravel pits or other extremely nitrogen deficient soils. Lodgepole pine with its S. tomentosus symbiont is one of the most common pioneer species in northern forests. It colonizes highly disturbed soils and creates an environment suitable for other species to colonize.
Remove ads
Edibility
The mushroom may be edible to some while others may find its taste acidic even after cooking.[4] The species has been known to cause gastric upset in some people.[11] According to David Arora, the species is of the same quality as S. fuscotomentosus.[7] Arora reports that one collector stated the mushroom smells and tastes like Tootsie Rolls when dried.[14] The species have also been said to smell like almonds.[11] When they look for this species, consumers are advised to be careful to distinguish it from other species that stain blue but are poisonous.[15]
See also
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads