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Published 2014
As explained under mushroom, there is a fundamental difference between an agaric and a bolete, immediately apparent to anyone looking under their caps. An agaric, such as the common field mushroom, has gills in the form of fine, radiating ‘plates’. A bolete has instead a mass of tubes, looking rather like foam rubber. The tubes terminate in pores, which may be very fine or quite coarse. (The group of polypores also has these tubes, but is distinguished from the boletus group by other features.)
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