Caps on stems; pores below caps [boletes & stemmed polypores]


 

The fungi in this group produce fruitbodies with pores on the underside of the cap. Mostly the pores are roughly circular but in some species they are elongated. In some species the pores measure a millimetre or more in diameter but in others they are almost invisible to the naked eye and you may need a magnifying glass or hand lens to confirm their presence.

 

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Discussion

KenT wrote:
Yesterday
For the Suillus suggestion to be a likely possibility there would probably need to be a Pinus tree nearby, I can't see any evidence of pine needles in the images. Suillus has a high host fidelity to trees in the Pinaceae none of these hosts are native to Australia. Suillus has also been reported from Quercus but there are no signs of oak leaves in the image. I can't make out the species of the trees in the maps image, though that might just be my eyes as computer screens have become hard to read.

Suillus sp.
mahargiani wrote:
Yesterday
No. There were a few silver birch street trees on the opposite side of the road, but they were removed 2 years ago. The fungus was beside a cultivated geranium, and just more than a meter away from a gum tree (E. viminalis).

Boletus sp.
Csteele4 wrote:
Yesterday
Phlebopus doesn't stain blue. This appears to be one of many previously undescribed species of native bolete.

Suillus sp.
Csteele4 wrote:
Yesterday
Were there any birch trees nearby?

Boletus sp.
Heinol wrote:
3 Mar 2025
Below ground there'd be a slerotium or pseudosclerotium, depending on which species this is.

Laccocephalum
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