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Caloboletus calopus

Caloboletus calopus, commonly known as the bitter bolete,[2] bitter beech bolete or scarlet-stemmed bolete, is a fungus of the bolete family, found in Asia, Northern Europe and North America. Appearing in coniferous and deciduous woodland in summer and autumn, the stout fruit bodies are attractively coloured, with a beige to olive cap up to 15 cm (6 in) across, yellow pores, and a reddish stipe up to 15 cm (6 in) long and 5 cm (2 in) wide. The pale yellow flesh stains blue when broken or bruised.

Caloboletus calopus
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Basidiomycota
Class: Agaricomycetes
Order: Boletales
Family: Boletaceae
Genus: Caloboletus
Species:
C. calopus
Binomial name
Caloboletus calopus
(Pers.) Vizzini (2014)
Synonyms[1]
  • Boletus calopus Pers. (1801)
  • Boletus olivaceus Schaeff. (1774)
  • Boletus lapidum J.F.Gmel. (1792)
  • Boletus pachypus var. olivaceus (Schaeff.) Pers. (1825)
  • Boletus subtomentosus subsp. calopus (Pers.) Pers. (1825)
  • Dictyopus calopus (Pers.) Quél. (1886)
  • Tubiporus calopus (Pers.) Maire (1937)
Caloboletus calopus
Pores on hymenium
Cap is convex
Hymenium is adnate
Stipe is bare
Spore print is olive-brown
Ecology is mycorrhizal
Edibility is poisonous

Christiaan Persoon first described Boletus calopus in 1801. Modern molecular phylogenetics showed that it was only distantly related to the type species of Boletus and required placement in a new genus; Caloboletus was erected in 2014, with C. calopus designated as the type species. Although Caloboletus calopus is not typically considered edible due to an intensely bitter taste that does not disappear with cooking, there are reports of it being consumed in eastern Europe. Its red stipe distinguishes it from edible species, such as Boletus edulis.

Taxonomy edit

Caloboletus calopus was originally published under the name Boletus olivaceus by Jacob Christian Schäffer in 1774,[3] but this name is unavailable for use as it was later sanctioned for another species.[4] Johann Friedrich Gmelin's 1792 synonym Boletus lapidum[5] is also illegitimate.[6] Christiaan Hendrik Persoon described the mushroom in 1801;[7] its specific name is derived from the Greek καλος/kalos ("pretty") and πους/pous ("foot"), referring to its brightly coloured stipe. The German name, Schönfußröhrling or "pretty-foot bolete", is a literal translation. Alternate common names are scarlet-stemmed bolete[8] and bitter beech bolete.[9]

Other synonyms include binomials resulting from generic transfers to Dictyopus by Lucien Quélet in 1886,[10] and Tubiporus by René Maire in 1937.[11] Boletus frustosus, originally published as a distinct species by Wally Snell and Esther Dick in 1941,[12] was later described as a variety of B. calopus by Orson K. Miller and Roy Watling in 1968.[13] Estadès and Lannoy described the variety ruforubraporus and the form ereticulatus from Europe in 2001.[14]

In his 1986 infrageneric classification of the genus Boletus, Rolf Singer placed C. calopus as the type species of the section Calopodes, which includes species characterised by having a whitish to yellowish flesh, bitter taste, and a blue staining reaction in the tube walls. Other species in section Calopodes include C. radicans, C. inedulis, B. peckii, and B. pallidus.[15] Genetic analysis published in 2013 showed that C. calopus and many (but not all) red-pored boletes were part of a dupainii clade (named for Boletus (now Rubroboletusdupainii), well-removed from the core group of the type species B. edulis and relatives within the Boletineae. This indicated it needed placement in a new genus.[16] This took place in 2014, B. calopus was transferred to (and designated the type species of) the new genus Caloboletus by Italian mycologist Alfredo Vizzini.[17]

Description edit

 
The yellowish pores turn blue when injured.

Up to 15 cm (6 in) or rarely 20 cm (8 in) in diameter, the cap is beige to olive and initially almost globular before opening out to a hemispherical and then convex shape.[18] The surface of the cap is smooth or has minute hairs, and sometimes develops cracks with age.[19] The cap cuticle hangs over the cap margin.[20] The pore surface is initially pale yellow before deepening to an olive-yellow in maturity, and quickly turns blue when it is injured. The pores, numbering one or two per millimetre, are circular when young but become more angular as the mushroom ages. The tubes are up to 2 cm (0.8 in) deep.[21]

The attractively coloured stipe is typically yellow above to pink-red below, with a straw-coloured network (reticulation) near the top or over the upper half;[21] occasionally the entire stipe is reddish.[19] It measures 7–15 cm (2.8–5.9 in) long by 2–5 cm (0.8–2.0 in) thick, and is either fairly equal in width throughout, or thicker towards the base.[21] Sometimes, the reddish stipe colour of mature mushrooms or harvested specimens that are a few days old disappears completely, and is replaced with ochre-brown tones.[22] The pale yellow flesh stains blue when broken, the discolouration spreading out from the damaged area.[23] Its smell can be strong, and has been likened to ink.[24] The spore print is olive to olive-brown. Spores are smooth and elliptical, measuring 13–19 by 5–6 µm.[21] The basidia (spore-bearing cells) are club-shaped, four-spored, and measure 30–38 by 9–12 µm. The cystidia are club-shaped to spindle-shaped, hyaline, and measure 25–40 by 10–15 µm.[22]

Variety frustosus is morphologically similar to the main type, but its cap becomes areolate (marked out into small areas by cracks and crevices) in maturity. Its spores are slightly smaller too, measuring 11–15 by 4–5.5 µm.[21] In the European form ereticulatus, the reticulations on the upper stipe are replaced with fine reddish granules, while the variety ruforubraporus has pinkish-red pores.[14]

Similar species edit

 
Xerocomellus chrysenteron has a non-reticulated stipe.
 
Caloboletus inedulis is smaller with a lighter-coloured cap.

The overall colouration of Caloboletus calopus, with its pale cap, yellow pores and red stipe, is not shared with any other bolete.[25] Large pale specimens resemble Suillellus luridus, and the cap of Rubroboletus satanas is a similar colour but this species has red pores. Fruit bodies in poor condition could be confused with Xerocomellus chrysenteron but the stipes of this species are not reticulated.[23] Edible species such as B. edulis lack a red stipe.[18] It closely resembles the similarly inedible C. radicans, which lacks the redness on the stipe.[25] Like C. calopus, the western North American species C. rubripes also has a bitter taste, similarly coloured cap, and yellowish pores that bruise blue, but it lacks reticulation on its reddish stipe.[26] Found in northwestern North America, B. coniferarum lacks reddish or pinkish colouration in its yellow reticulate stipe, and has a darker, olive-grey to deep brown cap.[19]

Two eastern North American species, C. inedulis and C. roseipes, also have an appearance similar to C. calopus. C. inedulis produces smaller fruit bodies with a white to greyish-white cap, while C. roseipes associates solely with hemlock.[27] C. firmus, found in the eastern United States, eastern Canada, and Costa Rica, has a pallid cap colour, reddish stipe, and bitter taste, but unlike C. calopus, has red pores and lacks stipe reticulation.[28] C. panniformis, a Japanese species described as new to science in 2013, bears a resemblance to C. calopus, but can be distinguished by its rough cap surface, or microscopically by the amyloid-staining cells in the flesh of the cap, and morphologically distinct cystidia on the stipe.[29]

Distribution and habitat edit

An ectomycorrhizal species,[27] Caloboletus calopus grows in coniferous and deciduous woodland, often at higher altitudes, especially under beech and oak.[24] Fruit bodies occur singly or in large groups.[22] The species grows on chalky ground from July to December, in Northern Europe,[24] and North America's Pacific Northwest and Michigan.[30] In North America, its range extends south to Mexico.[31] Variety frustosus is known from California and the Rocky Mountains of Idaho.[21] In 1968, after comparing European and North American collections, Miller and Watling suggested that the typical form of C. calopus does not occur in the United States. Similar comparisons by other authors have led them to the opposite conclusion,[32] and the species has since been included in several North American field guides.[19][21][26] The bolete has been recorded from the Black Sea region in Turkey,[33] from under Populus ciliata and Abies pindrow in Rawalpindi and Nathia Gali in Pakistan,[34] Yunnan Province in China,[35] Korea,[36] and Taiwan.[37]

Biochemistry edit

 
Structure of calopin.[38]

Although it is an attractive-looking bolete, Caloboletus calopus is not considered edible on account of its very bitter taste, which does not disappear upon cooking.[39] There are reports of it being eaten in far eastern Russia and Ukraine.[40] The bitter taste is largely due to the compounds calopin[38] and a δ-lactone derivative, O-acetylcyclocalopin A. These compounds contains a structural motif known as a 3-methylcatechol unit, which is rare in natural products. A total synthesis of calopin was reported in 2003.[41] The frustosus variety is reported as causing severe sickness in Europe.[42]

The pulvinic acid derivatives atromentic acid, variegatic acid, and xerocomic acid are present in B. calopus mushrooms. These compounds inhibit cytochrome P450—major enzymes involved in drug metabolism and bioactivation.[43] Other compounds found in the fruit bodies include calopin B,[44] and the sesquiterpenoid compounds cyclopinol[45] and boletunones A and B. The latter two highly oxygenated compounds have significant free-radical scavenging activity in vitro.[36] The compounds 3-octanone (47.0% of total volatile compounds), 3-octanol (27.0%), 1-octen-3-ol (15.0%), and limonene (3.6%) are the predominant volatile components that give the fruit body its odour.[46]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Synonyms: Boletus calopus Pers., Syn. meth. fung. (Göttingen) 2: 513 (1801)". Species Fungorum. CAB International. Retrieved 2013-03-19.
  2. ^ Arora, David (1986). Mushrooms demystified: a comprehensive guide to the fleshy fungi (Second ed.). Berkeley: Ten Speed Press. ISBN 978-0-89815-169-5.
  3. ^ Schäffer, J.C. (1774). Fungorum qui in Bavaria et Palatinatu circa Ratisbonam nascuntur Icones (in Latin and German). Vol. 4. Erlangen, Germany: Apud J.J. Palmium. p. 77; plate 105.
  4. ^ "Boletus olivaceus Schaeff., Fungorum qui in Bavaria et Palatinatu circa Ratisbonam nascuntur Icones, 4: 77, t. 105, 1774". MycoBank. International Mycological Association. Retrieved 2013-03-19.
  5. ^ Gmelin, J.F. (1792). (in Latin). Vol. 2 (13 ed.). Leipzig, Germany: G.E. Beer. p. 1434. Archived from the original on 2013-11-03. Retrieved 2013-11-02.
  6. ^ "Boletus lapidum J.F. Gmel., Systema Naturae, 2: 1434, 1792". MycoBank. International Mycological Association. Retrieved 2013-03-19.
  7. ^ Persoon, C.H. (1801). Synopsis methodica fungorum (in Latin). Göttingen, Sweden: Dieterich. p. 513.
  8. ^ Lamaison, J.-L.; Polese, J.-M. (2005). The Great Encyclopedia of Mushrooms. Cologne, Germany: Könemann. p. 33. ISBN 978-3-8331-1239-3.
  9. ^ Holden, E.M. (2003). (PDF). British Mycological Society. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-03-02.
  10. ^ Quélet, L. (1886). Enchiridion Fungorum in Europa media et praesertim in Gallia Vigentium (in Latin). Paris, France: Octave Dion. p. 160.
  11. ^ Maire, R. (1937). "Fungi Catalaunici: Series altera. Contributions a l'étude de la flore mycologique de la Catalogne". Publicacions del Instituto Botánico Barcelona (in French). 3 (4): 1–128 (see p. 46).
  12. ^ Snell, W.H.; Dick, E.A. (1941). "Notes on Boletes. VI". Mycologia. 33 (1): 23–37 (see p. 33). doi:10.2307/3754732. JSTOR 3754732.
  13. ^ Miller, O.K. Jr.; Watling, R. (1968). "The status of Boletus calopus Fr. in North America". Notes from the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh. 28: 317–26.
  14. ^ a b Estadès, A.; Lannoy, G. (2001). "Boletaceae – Validations diverses". Documents Mycologiques (in French). 31 (121): 57–61.
  15. ^ Singer, R. (1986). The Agaricales in Modern Taxonomy (4 ed.). Königstein im Taunus, Germany: Koeltz Scientific Books. p. 779. ISBN 978-3-87429-254-2.
  16. ^ Nuhn, M.E.; Binder, M.; Taylor, A.F.S.; Halling, R.E.; Hibbett, D.S. (2013). "Phylogenetic overview of the Boletineae". Fungal Biology. 117 (7–8): 479–511. doi:10.1016/j.funbio.2013.04.008. PMID 23931115.
  17. ^ Vizzini A. (10 June 2014). "Nomenclatural novelties" (PDF). Index Fungorum (146): 1–2. ISSN 2049-2375.
  18. ^ a b Zeitlmayr, L. (1976). Wild Mushrooms: An Illustrated Handbook. Hertfordshire, UK: Garden City Press. pp. 104–05. ISBN 978-0-584-10324-3.
  19. ^ a b c d Arora, D. (1986). Mushrooms Demystified: A Comprehensive Guide to the Fleshy Fungi. Berkeley, California: Ten Speed Press. p. 523. ISBN 978-0-89815-169-5.
  20. ^ Laessoe, T. (2002). Mushrooms. Smithsonian Handbooks (2 ed.). London, UK: Dorling Kindersley Adult. p. 190. ISBN 978-0-7894-8986-9.
  21. ^ a b c d e f g Bessette, A.R.; Bessette, A.; Roody, W.C. (2000). North American Boletes: A Color Guide to the Fleshy Pored Mushrooms. Syracuse, New York: Syracuse University Press. pp. 100–01. ISBN 978-0-8156-0588-1.
  22. ^ a b c Alessio, C.L. (1985). Boletus Dill. ex L. (sensu lato) (in Italian). Saronno, Italy: Biella Giovanna. pp. 153–56.
  23. ^ a b Haas, H. (1969). The Young Specialist looks at Fungi. London, UK: Burke. p. 36. ISBN 978-0-222-79409-3.
  24. ^ a b c Nilson, S.; Persson, O. (1977). Fungi of Northern Europe 1: Larger Fungi (Excluding Gill-Fungi). Harmondsworth, UK: Penguin. p. 104. ISBN 978-0-14-063005-3.
  25. ^ a b Breitenbach, J.; Kränzlin, F. (1991). Fungi of Switzerland 3: Boletes & Agarics, 1st Part. Lucerne, Switzerland: Sticher Printing. p. 52. ISBN 978-3-85604-230-1.
  26. ^ a b Davis, R.M.; Sommer, R.; Menge, J.A. (2012). Field Guide to Mushrooms of Western North America. Berkeley, California: University of California Press. p. 325. ISBN 978-0-520-95360-4.
  27. ^ a b Roberts, P.; Evans, S. (2011). The Book of Fungi. Chicago, Illinois: University of Chicago Press. p. 329. ISBN 978-0-226-72117-0.
  28. ^ Halling, R.; Mueller, G.M. (1999). "New boletes from Costa Rica". Mycologia. 91 (5): 893–99. doi:10.2307/3761543. JSTOR 3761543.
  29. ^ Takahashi, H.; Taneyama, Y.; Degawa, Y. (2013). "Notes on the boletes of Japan 1. Four new species of the genus Boletus from central Honshu, Japan". Mycoscience. 54 (6): 458–468. doi:10.1016/j.myc.2013.02.005.
  30. ^ Phillips, R. (2005). Mushrooms and Other Fungi of North America. Buffalo, New York: Firefly Books. p. 264. ISBN 978-1-55407-115-9.
  31. ^ Landeros, F.; Castillo, J.; Guzmán, G.; Cifuentes, J. (2006). "Los hongos (macromicetos) conocidos an at Cerro el Zamorano (Queretaro-Guanajuato), Mexico" [Known macromycetes from Cerro el Zamorano (Queretaro-Guanajuato), Mexico] (PDF). Revista Mexicana de Micologia (in Spanish). 22: 25–31.
  32. ^ Thiers, H.D. (1998) [1975]. "Boletus calopus". The Boletes of California. New York, New York: Hafner Press; MykoWeb (online version).
  33. ^ Sesli, E. (2007). "Preliminary checklist of macromycetes of the East and Middle Black Sea Regions of Turkey" (PDF). Mycotaxon. 99: 71–74.
  34. ^ Sarwar, S.; Khalid, A.N. (2013). "Preliminary Checklist of Boletales in Pakistan" (PDF). Mycotaxon: 1–12.
  35. ^ Wang, L.; Song D.-S.; Liang, J-F.; Li, Y-C.; Zhang, Y. (2006). "Macrofungus resources and their utilization in Shangri-La County, Northwest in Yunnan Province". Journal of Plant Resources and Environment (in Chinese). 15 (3): 79–80. ISSN 1004-0978.
  36. ^ a b Kim, W.-G.; Kim, J.-W.; Ryoo, I.-J.; Kim, J.-P.; Kim, Y.-H.; Yoo, I.-D. (2004). "Boletunones A and B, highly functionalized novel sesquiterpenes from Boletus calopus". Organic Letters. 6 (5): 823–26. doi:10.1021/ol049953i. PMID 14986984.
  37. ^ Yeh, K.-W.; Chen, Z.-C. (1981). "The boletes of Taiwan II". Taiwania. 26: 100–15. ISSN 0372-333X.
  38. ^ a b Hellwig, V.; Dasenbrock, J.; Gräf, C.; Kahner, L.; Schumann, S.; Steglich, W. (2002). "Calopins and cyclocalopins – Bitter principles from Boletus calopus and related mushrooms". European Journal of Organic Chemistry. 2002 (17): 2895–904. doi:10.1002/1099-0690(200209)2002:17<2895::AID-EJOC2895>3.0.CO;2-S.
  39. ^ Carluccio, A. (2003). The Complete Mushroom Book. London, UK: Quadrille. ISBN 978-1-84400-040-1.
  40. ^ Boa, E.R. (2004). Wild Edible Fungi: A Global Overview Of Their Use And Importance To People. Non-Wood Forest Products. Vol. 17. Rome: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. pp. 123, 128. ISBN 978-92-5-105157-3.
  41. ^ Ebel, H.; Knör, S.; Steglich, W. (2003). "Total synthesis of the mushroom metabolite (+)-calopin". Tetrahedron. 59 (1): 123–29. doi:10.1016/S0040-4020(02)01451-5.
  42. ^ Miller Jr., Orson K.; Miller, Hope H. (2006). North American Mushrooms: A Field Guide to Edible and Inedible Fungi. Guilford, CN: FalconGuides. p. 396. ISBN 978-0-7627-3109-1.
  43. ^ Huang, Y.-T.; Onose, J.-I.; Abe, N.; Yoshikawa, K. (2009). "In vitro inhibitory effects of pulvinic acid derivatives isolated from Chinese edible mushrooms, Boletus calopus and Suillus bovinus, on cytochrome P450 activity" (PDF). Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Biochemistry. 73 (4): 855–60. doi:10.1271/bbb.80759. PMID 19352038. S2CID 39654350.
  44. ^ Kim, J.-W.; Yoo, I.-D.; Kim, W.-G. (2006). "Free radical-scavenging δ-lactones from Boletus calopus". Planta Medica. 72 (15): 1431–32. doi:10.1055/s-2006-951722. PMID 17091435.
  45. ^ Liu, D.-Z.; Wang, F.; Jia, R.-R.; Liu, J.-K. (2008). "A novel sesquiterpene from the basidiomycete Boletus calopus" (PDF). Zeitschrift für Naturforschung B. 63 (1): 114–16. doi:10.1515/znb-2008-0119. S2CID 94040226.
  46. ^ Rapior, S.; Marion, C.; Pélissier, Y.; Bessière, J.-M. (1997). "Volatile composition of fourteen species of fresh wild mushrooms (Boletales)". Journal of Essential Oil Research. 9 (2): 231–34. doi:10.1080/10412905.1997.9699468.

External links edit

caloboletus, calopus, commonly, known, bitter, bolete, bitter, beech, bolete, scarlet, stemmed, bolete, fungus, bolete, family, found, asia, northern, europe, north, america, appearing, coniferous, deciduous, woodland, summer, autumn, stout, fruit, bodies, att. Caloboletus calopus commonly known as the bitter bolete 2 bitter beech bolete or scarlet stemmed bolete is a fungus of the bolete family found in Asia Northern Europe and North America Appearing in coniferous and deciduous woodland in summer and autumn the stout fruit bodies are attractively coloured with a beige to olive cap up to 15 cm 6 in across yellow pores and a reddish stipe up to 15 cm 6 in long and 5 cm 2 in wide The pale yellow flesh stains blue when broken or bruised Caloboletus calopusScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom FungiDivision BasidiomycotaClass AgaricomycetesOrder BoletalesFamily BoletaceaeGenus CaloboletusSpecies C calopusBinomial nameCaloboletus calopus Pers Vizzini 2014 Synonyms 1 Boletus calopus Pers 1801 Boletus olivaceus Schaeff 1774 Boletus lapidum J F Gmel 1792 Boletus pachypus var olivaceus Schaeff Pers 1825 Boletus subtomentosus subsp calopus Pers Pers 1825 Dictyopus calopus Pers Quel 1886 Tubiporus calopus Pers Maire 1937 Caloboletus calopusMycological characteristicsPores on hymeniumCap is convexHymenium is adnateStipe is bareSpore print is olive brownEcology is mycorrhizalEdibility is poisonousChristiaan Persoon first described Boletus calopus in 1801 Modern molecular phylogenetics showed that it was only distantly related to the type species of Boletus and required placement in a new genus Caloboletus was erected in 2014 with C calopus designated as the type species Although Caloboletus calopus is not typically considered edible due to an intensely bitter taste that does not disappear with cooking there are reports of it being consumed in eastern Europe Its red stipe distinguishes it from edible species such as Boletus edulis Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Description 3 Similar species 4 Distribution and habitat 5 Biochemistry 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksTaxonomy editCaloboletus calopus was originally published under the name Boletus olivaceus by Jacob Christian Schaffer in 1774 3 but this name is unavailable for use as it was later sanctioned for another species 4 Johann Friedrich Gmelin s 1792 synonym Boletus lapidum 5 is also illegitimate 6 Christiaan Hendrik Persoon described the mushroom in 1801 7 its specific name is derived from the Greek kalos kalos pretty and poys pous foot referring to its brightly coloured stipe The German name Schonfussrohrling or pretty foot bolete is a literal translation Alternate common names are scarlet stemmed bolete 8 and bitter beech bolete 9 Other synonyms include binomials resulting from generic transfers to Dictyopus by Lucien Quelet in 1886 10 and Tubiporus by Rene Maire in 1937 11 Boletus frustosus originally published as a distinct species by Wally Snell and Esther Dick in 1941 12 was later described as a variety of B calopus by Orson K Miller and Roy Watling in 1968 13 Estades and Lannoy described the variety ruforubraporus and the form ereticulatus from Europe in 2001 14 In his 1986 infrageneric classification of the genus Boletus Rolf Singer placed C calopus as the type species of the section Calopodes which includes species characterised by having a whitish to yellowish flesh bitter taste and a blue staining reaction in the tube walls Other species in section Calopodes include C radicans C inedulis B peckii and B pallidus 15 Genetic analysis published in 2013 showed that C calopus and many but not all red pored boletes were part of a dupainii clade named for Boletus now Rubroboletus dupainii well removed from the core group of the type species B edulis and relatives within the Boletineae This indicated it needed placement in a new genus 16 This took place in 2014 B calopus was transferred to and designated the type species of the new genus Caloboletus by Italian mycologist Alfredo Vizzini 17 Description edit nbsp The yellowish pores turn blue when injured Up to 15 cm 6 in or rarely 20 cm 8 in in diameter the cap is beige to olive and initially almost globular before opening out to a hemispherical and then convex shape 18 The surface of the cap is smooth or has minute hairs and sometimes develops cracks with age 19 The cap cuticle hangs over the cap margin 20 The pore surface is initially pale yellow before deepening to an olive yellow in maturity and quickly turns blue when it is injured The pores numbering one or two per millimetre are circular when young but become more angular as the mushroom ages The tubes are up to 2 cm 0 8 in deep 21 The attractively coloured stipe is typically yellow above to pink red below with a straw coloured network reticulation near the top or over the upper half 21 occasionally the entire stipe is reddish 19 It measures 7 15 cm 2 8 5 9 in long by 2 5 cm 0 8 2 0 in thick and is either fairly equal in width throughout or thicker towards the base 21 Sometimes the reddish stipe colour of mature mushrooms or harvested specimens that are a few days old disappears completely and is replaced with ochre brown tones 22 The pale yellow flesh stains blue when broken the discolouration spreading out from the damaged area 23 Its smell can be strong and has been likened to ink 24 The spore print is olive to olive brown Spores are smooth and elliptical measuring 13 19 by 5 6 µm 21 The basidia spore bearing cells are club shaped four spored and measure 30 38 by 9 12 µm The cystidia are club shaped to spindle shaped hyaline and measure 25 40 by 10 15 µm 22 Variety frustosus is morphologically similar to the main type but its cap becomes areolate marked out into small areas by cracks and crevices in maturity Its spores are slightly smaller too measuring 11 15 by 4 5 5 µm 21 In the European form ereticulatus the reticulations on the upper stipe are replaced with fine reddish granules while the variety ruforubraporus has pinkish red pores 14 Similar species edit nbsp Xerocomellus chrysenteron has a non reticulated stipe nbsp Caloboletus inedulis is smaller with a lighter coloured cap The overall colouration of Caloboletus calopus with its pale cap yellow pores and red stipe is not shared with any other bolete 25 Large pale specimens resemble Suillellus luridus and the cap of Rubroboletus satanas is a similar colour but this species has red pores Fruit bodies in poor condition could be confused with Xerocomellus chrysenteron but the stipes of this species are not reticulated 23 Edible species such as B edulis lack a red stipe 18 It closely resembles the similarly inedible C radicans which lacks the redness on the stipe 25 Like C calopus the western North American species C rubripes also has a bitter taste similarly coloured cap and yellowish pores that bruise blue but it lacks reticulation on its reddish stipe 26 Found in northwestern North America B coniferarum lacks reddish or pinkish colouration in its yellow reticulate stipe and has a darker olive grey to deep brown cap 19 Two eastern North American species C inedulis and C roseipes also have an appearance similar to C calopus C inedulis produces smaller fruit bodies with a white to greyish white cap while C roseipes associates solely with hemlock 27 C firmus found in the eastern United States eastern Canada and Costa Rica has a pallid cap colour reddish stipe and bitter taste but unlike C calopus has red pores and lacks stipe reticulation 28 C panniformis a Japanese species described as new to science in 2013 bears a resemblance to C calopus but can be distinguished by its rough cap surface or microscopically by the amyloid staining cells in the flesh of the cap and morphologically distinct cystidia on the stipe 29 Distribution and habitat editAn ectomycorrhizal species 27 Caloboletus calopus grows in coniferous and deciduous woodland often at higher altitudes especially under beech and oak 24 Fruit bodies occur singly or in large groups 22 The species grows on chalky ground from July to December in Northern Europe 24 and North America s Pacific Northwest and Michigan 30 In North America its range extends south to Mexico 31 Variety frustosus is known from California and the Rocky Mountains of Idaho 21 In 1968 after comparing European and North American collections Miller and Watling suggested that the typical form of C calopus does not occur in the United States Similar comparisons by other authors have led them to the opposite conclusion 32 and the species has since been included in several North American field guides 19 21 26 The bolete has been recorded from the Black Sea region in Turkey 33 from under Populus ciliata and Abies pindrow in Rawalpindi and Nathia Gali in Pakistan 34 Yunnan Province in China 35 Korea 36 and Taiwan 37 Biochemistry edit nbsp Structure of calopin 38 Although it is an attractive looking bolete Caloboletus calopus is not considered edible on account of its very bitter taste which does not disappear upon cooking 39 There are reports of it being eaten in far eastern Russia and Ukraine 40 The bitter taste is largely due to the compounds calopin 38 and a d lactone derivative O acetylcyclocalopin A These compounds contains a structural motif known as a 3 methylcatechol unit which is rare in natural products A total synthesis of calopin was reported in 2003 41 The frustosus variety is reported as causing severe sickness in Europe 42 The pulvinic acid derivatives atromentic acid variegatic acid and xerocomic acid are present in B calopus mushrooms These compounds inhibit cytochrome P450 major enzymes involved in drug metabolism and bioactivation 43 Other compounds found in the fruit bodies include calopin B 44 and the sesquiterpenoid compounds cyclopinol 45 and boletunones A and B The latter two highly oxygenated compounds have significant free radical scavenging activity in vitro 36 The compounds 3 octanone 47 0 of total volatile compounds 3 octanol 27 0 1 octen 3 ol 15 0 and limonene 3 6 are the predominant volatile components that give the fruit body its odour 46 See also edit nbsp Fungi portalList of North American boletesReferences edit Synonyms Boletus calopus Pers Syn meth fung Gottingen 2 513 1801 Species Fungorum CAB International Retrieved 2013 03 19 Arora David 1986 Mushrooms demystified a comprehensive guide to the fleshy fungi Second ed Berkeley Ten Speed Press ISBN 978 0 89815 169 5 Schaffer J C 1774 Fungorum qui in Bavaria et Palatinatu circa Ratisbonam nascuntur Icones in Latin and German Vol 4 Erlangen Germany Apud J J Palmium p 77 plate 105 Boletus olivaceus Schaeff Fungorum qui in Bavaria et Palatinatu circa Ratisbonam nascuntur Icones 4 77 t 105 1774 MycoBank International Mycological Association Retrieved 2013 03 19 Gmelin J F 1792 Systema Naturae in Latin Vol 2 13 ed Leipzig Germany G E Beer p 1434 Archived from the original on 2013 11 03 Retrieved 2013 11 02 Boletus lapidum J F Gmel Systema Naturae 2 1434 1792 MycoBank International Mycological Association Retrieved 2013 03 19 Persoon C H 1801 Synopsis methodica fungorum in Latin Gottingen Sweden Dieterich p 513 Lamaison J L Polese J M 2005 The Great Encyclopedia of Mushrooms Cologne Germany Konemann p 33 ISBN 978 3 8331 1239 3 Holden E M 2003 Recommended English Names for Fungi in the UK PDF British Mycological Society Archived from the original PDF on 2013 03 02 Quelet L 1886 Enchiridion Fungorum in Europa media et praesertim in Gallia Vigentium in Latin Paris France Octave Dion p 160 Maire R 1937 Fungi Catalaunici Series altera Contributions a l etude de la flore mycologique de la Catalogne Publicacions del Instituto Botanico Barcelona in French 3 4 1 128 see p 46 Snell W H Dick E A 1941 Notes on Boletes VI Mycologia 33 1 23 37 see p 33 doi 10 2307 3754732 JSTOR 3754732 Miller O K Jr Watling R 1968 The status of Boletus calopus Fr in North America Notes from the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh 28 317 26 a b Estades A Lannoy G 2001 Boletaceae Validations diverses Documents Mycologiques in French 31 121 57 61 Singer R 1986 The Agaricales in Modern Taxonomy 4 ed Konigstein im Taunus Germany Koeltz Scientific Books p 779 ISBN 978 3 87429 254 2 Nuhn M E Binder M Taylor A F S Halling R E Hibbett D S 2013 Phylogenetic overview of the Boletineae Fungal Biology 117 7 8 479 511 doi 10 1016 j funbio 2013 04 008 PMID 23931115 Vizzini A 10 June 2014 Nomenclatural novelties PDF Index Fungorum 146 1 2 ISSN 2049 2375 a b Zeitlmayr L 1976 Wild Mushrooms An Illustrated Handbook Hertfordshire UK Garden City Press pp 104 05 ISBN 978 0 584 10324 3 a b c d Arora D 1986 Mushrooms Demystified A Comprehensive Guide to the Fleshy Fungi Berkeley California Ten Speed Press p 523 ISBN 978 0 89815 169 5 Laessoe T 2002 Mushrooms Smithsonian Handbooks 2 ed London UK Dorling Kindersley Adult p 190 ISBN 978 0 7894 8986 9 a b c d e f g Bessette A R Bessette A Roody W C 2000 North American Boletes A Color Guide to the Fleshy Pored Mushrooms Syracuse New York Syracuse University Press pp 100 01 ISBN 978 0 8156 0588 1 a b c Alessio C L 1985 BoletusDill ex L sensu lato in Italian Saronno Italy Biella Giovanna pp 153 56 a b Haas H 1969 The Young Specialist looks at Fungi London UK Burke p 36 ISBN 978 0 222 79409 3 a b c Nilson S Persson O 1977 Fungi of Northern Europe 1 Larger Fungi Excluding Gill Fungi Harmondsworth UK Penguin p 104 ISBN 978 0 14 063005 3 a b Breitenbach J Kranzlin F 1991 Fungi of Switzerland 3 Boletes amp Agarics 1st Part Lucerne Switzerland Sticher Printing p 52 ISBN 978 3 85604 230 1 a b Davis R M Sommer R Menge J A 2012 Field Guide to Mushrooms of Western North America Berkeley California University of California Press p 325 ISBN 978 0 520 95360 4 a b Roberts P Evans S 2011 The Book of Fungi Chicago Illinois University of Chicago Press p 329 ISBN 978 0 226 72117 0 Halling R Mueller G M 1999 New boletes from Costa Rica Mycologia 91 5 893 99 doi 10 2307 3761543 JSTOR 3761543 Takahashi H Taneyama Y Degawa Y 2013 Notes on the boletes of Japan 1 Four new species of the genus Boletus from central Honshu Japan Mycoscience 54 6 458 468 doi 10 1016 j myc 2013 02 005 Phillips R 2005 Mushrooms and Other Fungi of North America Buffalo New York Firefly Books p 264 ISBN 978 1 55407 115 9 Landeros F Castillo J Guzman G Cifuentes J 2006 Los hongos macromicetos conocidos an at Cerro el Zamorano Queretaro Guanajuato Mexico Known macromycetes from Cerro el Zamorano Queretaro Guanajuato Mexico PDF Revista Mexicana de Micologia in Spanish 22 25 31 Thiers H D 1998 1975 Boletus calopus The Boletes of California New York New York Hafner Press MykoWeb online version Sesli E 2007 Preliminary checklist of macromycetes of the East and Middle Black Sea Regions of Turkey PDF Mycotaxon 99 71 74 Sarwar S Khalid A N 2013 Preliminary Checklist of Boletales in Pakistan PDF Mycotaxon 1 12 Wang L Song D S Liang J F Li Y C Zhang Y 2006 Macrofungus resources and their utilization in Shangri La County Northwest in Yunnan Province Journal of Plant Resources and Environment in Chinese 15 3 79 80 ISSN 1004 0978 a b Kim W G Kim J W Ryoo I J Kim J P Kim Y H Yoo I D 2004 Boletunones A and B highly functionalized novel sesquiterpenes from Boletus calopus Organic Letters 6 5 823 26 doi 10 1021 ol049953i PMID 14986984 Yeh K W Chen Z C 1981 The boletes of Taiwan II Taiwania 26 100 15 ISSN 0372 333X a b Hellwig V Dasenbrock J Graf C Kahner L Schumann S Steglich W 2002 Calopins and cyclocalopins Bitter principles from Boletus calopus and related mushrooms European Journal of Organic Chemistry 2002 17 2895 904 doi 10 1002 1099 0690 200209 2002 17 lt 2895 AID EJOC2895 gt 3 0 CO 2 S Carluccio A 2003 The Complete Mushroom Book London UK Quadrille ISBN 978 1 84400 040 1 Boa E R 2004 Wild Edible Fungi A Global Overview Of Their Use And Importance To People Non Wood Forest Products Vol 17 Rome Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations pp 123 128 ISBN 978 92 5 105157 3 Ebel H Knor S Steglich W 2003 Total synthesis of the mushroom metabolite calopin Tetrahedron 59 1 123 29 doi 10 1016 S0040 4020 02 01451 5 Miller Jr Orson K Miller Hope H 2006 North American Mushrooms A Field Guide to Edible and Inedible Fungi Guilford CN FalconGuides p 396 ISBN 978 0 7627 3109 1 Huang Y T Onose J I Abe N Yoshikawa K 2009 In vitro inhibitory effects of pulvinic acid derivatives isolated from Chinese edible mushrooms Boletus calopus and Suillus bovinus on cytochrome P450 activity PDF Bioscience Biotechnology and Biochemistry 73 4 855 60 doi 10 1271 bbb 80759 PMID 19352038 S2CID 39654350 Kim J W Yoo I D Kim W G 2006 Free radical scavenging d lactones from Boletus calopus Planta Medica 72 15 1431 32 doi 10 1055 s 2006 951722 PMID 17091435 Liu D Z Wang F Jia R R Liu J K 2008 A novel sesquiterpene from the basidiomycete Boletus calopus PDF Zeitschrift fur Naturforschung B 63 1 114 16 doi 10 1515 znb 2008 0119 S2CID 94040226 Rapior S Marion C Pelissier Y Bessiere J M 1997 Volatile composition of fourteen species of fresh wild mushrooms Boletales Journal of Essential Oil Research 9 2 231 34 doi 10 1080 10412905 1997 9699468 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Caloboletus calopus nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Caloboletus calopus 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