Boletales
| Boletales | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scientific Classification | ||||||||
|
Members of the order Boletales (commonly referred to as Boletes) are mushrooms characterized by holding their spores in small pores on the underside of the mushroom, instead of gills (as are found in agarics). Nearly as widely distributed as agarics, they include the king bolete, much sought after by mushroom hunters.
Similar to boletes, and generally only distinguished technically, are polypores.
Boletes are a relatively safe group of mushrooms for human consumption (none are known to be deadly to adults), provided that one:
- Eats only young specimens
- Avoids mushrooms with red or orange pore surfaces
- Avoids those that stain or bruise blue to green (a common trait)
- Avoids all Leccinium species with an orange cap