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Arora, D. 2008. California Porcini: Three New Taxa, Observations on Their Harvest, and
the Tragedy of No Commons1. ECONOMIC BOTANY. 62(3):356-375.
Address:
Arora, D, Oregon State Univ, Dept Forest Sci, 3200 Jefferson Way,
Corvallis, OR 97331
California Porcini: Three New Taxa, Observations on their Harvest, and
the Tragedy of No Commons. Seven species of California porcini
(Boletus, sect. Boletus) are recognized, including three new taxa that
are culturally and economically significant: B. rex-veris sp. nov., B.
regineus sp. nov., and B. edulis var. grandedulis var. nov. The three
new taxa have been intensively gathered during the last century by
Italian immigrants, and B. rex-veris sp. nov. more recently by
southeast Asian immigrants as well as by long-time rural residents. B.
rex-veris sp. nov. is restricted to inland mountains while the other
two are widely distributed, and are abundant in California's heavily
populated coastal zone. In the 1990s, reflecting the preservationist
policies of mainstream environmental organizations, many park
authorities and land management agencies in coastal California closed
public lands to mushroom gathering. Organized attempts to establish
legal, limited gathering in a few parks were almost entirely
unsuccessful. The result is that it is illegal to pick porcini on
nearly all public lands over a 6,000-square-mile area, even though they
grow prolifically in coastal California. Many of coastal California's
porcini are picked anyway by those willing to risk being apprehended
and fined. In response to the official intolerance for mushroom
gathering, an entire generation of mushroom hunters has grown up
practicing the activity in secret.
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