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the bolete eater

Hypomyces chrysospermus

Photo by AlexKonig
Published on Project Noah
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Field Notes

Notes:

The fruit bodies of B. edulis can be infected by the parasitic mould-like fungus Hypomyces chrysospermus, known as the bolete eater, which manifests itself as a white, yellow, or reddish-brown cottony layer over the surface of the mushroom. Some reported cases of stomach ache following consumption of dried porcini have been attributed to the presence of this mould on the fruit bodies. The mushroom is also used as a food source by several species of mushroom flies, as well as other insects and their larvae. An unidentified species of virus was reported to have infected specimens found in the Netherlands and in Italy; fruit bodies affected by the virus had relatively thick stems and small or no caps, leading to the name "little-cap disease".

Boletus edulis is a food source for animals such as the banana slug (Ariolimax columbianus), the Long-haired Grass Mouse, the Red Squirrel, and, as noted in one isolated report, the Fox Sparrow.

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