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Gyroporus castaneus

Gyroporus castaneus
Gyro.cast.jpg
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Basidiomycota
Class: Agaricomycetes
Order: Boletales
Family: Gyroporaceae
Genus: Gyroporus
Species: G. castaneus
Binomial name
Gyroporus castaneus
(Bull.) Quel. (1886)
Synonyms

Boletus castaneus Bull. (1787)
Suillus castaneus (Bull.) P.Karst. (1882)
Leucobolites castaneus (Bull.) Beck (1923)

Gyroporus castaneus
Mycological characteristics
pores on hymenium

cap is convex

or flat
stipe is bare
spore print is yellow
ecology is mycorrhizal
edibility: edible

Boletus castaneus Bull. (1787)
Suillus castaneus (Bull.) P.Karst. (1882)
Leucobolites castaneus (Bull.) Beck (1923)

Gyroporus castaneus, or commonly the chestnut bolete, is a small, white-pored relation of the Boletus mushrooms. It has a brown cap, and is usually found with oak trees. It differs from the true boletes in that the spores are a pale straw colour.

The species was described initially by the French mycologist Jean Baptiste François Pierre Bulliard (1742–1792). Formerly a member of the Paxillaceae family, research now places this mushroom in Gyroporaceae. Gyroporus means 'having round pores', and castaneus is a reference to the chestnut colouration.

The cap is from 3 to 10 cm in diameter, and pale to rusty brown in colour, which becomes darker with age. The stem is a similar colour, although it may be lighter at the apex. If the stem is cut vertically, it is usual to find several cavities of differing sizes inside. Both the cap and the stem have a tendency to crack or split in dry periods, or with age. The pores are small and white; they become dirtier with age, and are not attached to the stem. They darken slightly when pressed. The tubes are also whitish, and the spore print is pale yellow to straw. The flesh is firm, and does not change colour on cutting. The photograph on the right shows the chunkier form; a slender form also occurs.

The mushroom is found occasionally in Britain and throughout continental Europe, as well as eastern North America, but it is rare in western North America. It grows in small groups, or singly, in an ectomycorrhizal relationship with oaks (Quercus). It prefers acid and sandy soils, and fruits from summer to autumn. In New Zealand, it is found in association with Leptospermum. In Asia, it has been recorded from Taiwan.


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