Esther Amelia Dick

Botanist (1909-1985).

Abbreviations: E.A.Dick
Occupations: mycologist, botanist
Citizenships: United States
Languages: English
Dates: 1909-01-01T00:00:00Z – 1985-01-01T00:00:00Z
Birth place: Reading
Direct attributions: 0 plants, 25 fungi
Authorship mentions: 0 plants, 31 fungi
Links:IPNIVIAF

25 fungi attributed, 6 fungi contributed to31 fungi:

Suillus tomentosus (Blue-staining Slippery Jack) Singer, Snell & E.A. Dick 1960
fungi species in the suillaceae family
Suillus tomentosus is a species of fungus. The common names of the species are blue-staining slippery jack, poor man's slippery Jack, and woolly-capped suillus. Found in North America, the mushroom is edible for most people, but may cause gastric upset in others; it also resembles some poisonous species.
Auriscalpium villipes (Lloyd) Snell & E.A. Dick 1958
fungi species in the auriscalpiaceae family
Auriscalpium villipes is a species of fungus in the family Auriscalpiaceae of the Russulales order. It is a spine fungus that grows on dead wood, and is found in Brazil and Mexico.
Xanthoconium purpureum Snell & E.A. Dick 1962
fungi species in the boletaceae family
Xanthoconium purpureum is a species of bolete fungus in the genus Xanthoconium. It was described as new to science in 1962 by Wally Snell and Esther Dick in 1962. It is found in eastern North America, where it fruits under oak, sometimes in oak-pine forests.
Tylopilus plumbeoviolaceus (Violet-grey Bolete) (Snell & E.A. Dick) Snell & E.A. Dick 1941
fungi species in the boletaceae family
Tylopilus plumbeoviolaceus (formerly Boletus plumbeoviolaceus), commonly known as the violet-grey bolete, is a fungus of the bolete family. First described in 1936, the mushroom has a disjunct distribution, and is distributed in North America and Korea. The fruit bodies of the fungus are violet when young, but fade into a chocolate brown color when mature. They are solid and relatively large—cap diameter up to 15 cm (6 in), with a white pore surface that later turns pink, and a white mycelium at the base of the stem. The mushroom is inedible. A number of natural products have been identified
Suillus pinorigidus Snell & E.A. Dick 1956
fungi species in the suillaceae family
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Boletus flammans (Flame Bolete) E.A. Dick & Snell 1965
fungi species in the boletaceae family
Boletus flammans is a species of bolete fungus found in North America. It was described scientifically by Esther A. Dick and Wally Snell in 1965. As of 2011, its edibility remained unknown.
Suillus megaporinus Snell & E.A. Dick 1956
fungi species in the suillaceae family
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Suillus umbonatus (Slender Jack) E.A. Dick & Snell 1961
fungi species in the suillaceae family
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Leccinum flavostipitatum E.A. Dick & Snell 1965
fungi species in the boletaceae family
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Leccinum brunneoolivaceum Snell, E.A. Dick & Hesler 1951
fungi species in the boletaceae family
Leccinum brunneo-olivaceum is a species of bolete fungus in the family Boletaceae. It was described as new to science in 1951 by Wally Snell, Ester Dick, and Lexemuel Ray Hesler. The type collection was made in Great Smoky Mountains National Park in Tennessee.
Leccinum aurantiellum E.A. Dick & Snell 1969
fungi species in the boletaceae family
Leccinum aurantiellum is a species of bolete fungus in the family Boletaceae. Found in the United States, it was described as new to science in 1971 by Harry Delbert Thiers.
Xerocomus rubrosquamulosus Snell, E.A. Dick & Hesler 1951
fungi species in the boletaceae family
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Xerocomus lenticolor E.A. Dick & Snell 1961
fungi species in the boletaceae family
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Tylopilus subunicolor E.A. Dick & Snell 1961
fungi species in the boletaceae family
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Suillus subvariegatus Snell & E.A. Dick 1956
fungi species in the suillaceae family
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Steccherinum minutissimum Snell & E.A. Dick 1958
fungi species in the steccherinaceae family
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Porphyrellus atrofuscus E.A. Dick & Snell 1961
fungi species in the boletaceae family
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Leccinum variobrunneum E.A. Dick & Snell 1969
fungi species in the boletaceae family
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Leccinum succineobrunneum E.A. Dick & Snell 1969
fungi species in the boletaceae family
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Leccinum subleucophaeum E.A. Dick & Snell 1961
fungi species in the boletaceae family
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Leccinum parvisquamulosum E.A. Dick & Snell 1969
fungi species in the boletaceae family
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Hydnum subpallidum Snell & E.A. Dick 1962
fungi species in the hydnaceae family
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Hydnum modestum Snell & E.A. Dick 1962
fungi species in the hydnaceae family
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Xerocomus alutaceus (Morgan) E.A. Dick & Snell 1962
fungi species in the boletaceae family
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Suillus sinuspaulianus (Pomerl. & A.H. Sm.) E.A. Dick & Snell 1965
fungi species in the suillaceae family
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Caloboletus frustosus (Snell & E.A. Dick) D. Arora & J.L. Frank 2014
fungi species in the boletaceae family
Caloboletus frustosus is a bolete fungus native to North America. Until 2014, it was known as Boletus frustosus. Recent changes in the phylogenetic framework of the family Boletaceae prompted the transfer of this species, along with several other related boletes, including Caloboletus calopus, to the genus Caloboletus. It was first described scientifically in 1941 by mycologists Wally Snell and Esther Dick.
Boletus subcaerulescens (Almost Bluing King Bolete) (E.A. Dick & Snell) Both, Bessette & A.R. Bessette 2000
fungi species in the boletaceae family
Boletus subcaerulescens is a basidiomycete fungus of the genus Boletus found in northeastern North America. The fruiting bodies are found associated with pine and spruce. The cap is up to 18 cm wide, convex to flat, and brown in color. The tubes are yellow and stain blue (later becoming brown) when bruised, while the flesh is white to buff and does not stain when cut. The stem is brown like the cap and has a light-colored reticulate texture. The specific epithet is from Latin: sub- + caeruleus + -escens, literally "becoming dark blue beneath". Phylogenetic analysis has shown B.
Boletus aurantioruber (E.A. Dick & Snell) Both, Bessette & W.J. Neill 2001
fungi species in the boletaceae family
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Suillus punctatipes (Snell & E.A. Dick) Singer 1945
fungi species in the suillaceae family
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Xerocomellus truncatus (Singer, Snell & E.A. Dick) Klofac 2011
fungi species in the boletaceae family
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