This species was originally described by
Bulliard in his 1793 "Herbier de la France" as
Agaricus fusipes at a time when all
gilled mushrooms were assigned to genus
Agaricus. Then in 1821
Samuel Frederick Gray published his "Natural Arrangement of British Plants" (including fungi) in which he allocated the species to the already existing genus
Gymnopus. However Gray's book was not very popular and in 1872
Lucien Quélet put this mushroom in genus
Collybia, giving it the name
Collybia fusipes by which it was generally known for many years. In much later work culminating in 1997, Antonín and Noordeloos found that the genus
Collybia as defined at that time was unsatisfactory due to being
polyphyletic and they proposed a fundamental rearrangement. They resurrected the genus
Gymnopus for some species including
fusipes, and after subsequent DNA studies, this has been accepted by modern authorities including
Species Fungorum and the
Global Biodiversity Information Facility, and so its current name has reverted to Gray's combination,
Gymnopus fusipes. There was also an alternative move to reclassify it under
Rhodocollybia, but that has not generally been accepted.
Gymnopus fusipes is the
type species of the genus
Gymnopus. The species name
fusipes indicates that the stem is spindle-shaped (from the Latin
fusus meaning "spindle" and
pes meaning "foot"). The English name "Spindle Shank" has been given to this species. Earlier in 1821
Gray had already given it the English name "Spindle naked-foot", but that suggestion never gained much popularity. ==Description==