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Definition of Boletus pallidus
1. Noun. A fungus that has an off-white cap when it is young but later becomes dingy brown and a stalk of the same color; the under surface of the cap (the tubes) a pale greenish yellow.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Boletus Pallidus
Literary usage of Boletus pallidus
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Mushroom Book: A Popular Guide to the Identification and Study of Our by Nina Lovering Marshall (1904)
"Boletus pallidus Cap—Pallid or brownish white, sometimes tinged with red. Flesh—
White. Tubes—Pale whitish yellow, changing to blue when wounded. ..."
2. Plant Life of Alabama: An Account of the Distribution, Modes of Association by Charles Mohr (1901)
"Lee County, July, 1896 ( Underwood <f- Earle). Boletus pallidus Frost. Ala. Bull.
250. Cornell Bull. 27. Woods, on the ground. Lee County, Auburn, July, ! ..."
3. Contributions from the New York Botanical Garden by New York Botanical Garden (1907)
"Boletus pallidus Frost. Represented by three sheets, containing three excellent
specimens and six more or less moulded ones. ..."
4. Bulletin of the Cornell University by Cornell University (1874)
"Boletus pallidus Frost. Auburn, 1701, on ground in woods, July 1890. Boletus affirms
Pk. Auburn, 1351, summer, 1890. Boletus chrysenteron Fr. Auburn, 1616, ..."
5. Bulletin (1914)
"Boletus pallidus Frost . o, entire plant; 6, pores. Fig. 73.—Boletus chrysenteron.
a, pileus; 6, pores. Ladysmith, August. ..."