Russula brevipes was initially
described by American mycologist
Charles Horton Peck in 1890, from specimens collected in
Quogue, New York. It is classified in the
subsection Lactaroideae, a grouping of similar
Russula species characterized by having whitish to pale yellow
fruit bodies, compact and hard
flesh, abundant lamellulae (short
gills), and the absence of
clamp connections. Other related
Russula species with a similar range of
spore ornamentation heights include
Russula delica,
R. romagnesiana, and
R. pseudodelica. There has been considerable confusion in the literature over the naming of
Russula brevipes. Some early 20th-century American mycologists referred to it as
Russula delica, although that fungus was described from Europe by
Elias Fries with a description not accurately matching the North American counterparts. Fries's concept of
R. delica included: a white fruit body that did not change color; a smooth, shiny cap; and thin, widely spaced gills. To add to the confusion,
Rolf Singer and later
Robert Kühner and
Henri Romagnesi described other species they named
Russula delica. Robert Shaffer summarized the
taxonomic conundrum in 1964:
Russula delica is a species that everybody knows, so to speak, but the evidence indicates that
R. delica sensu Fries (1838) is not
R. delica sensu Singer (1938), which in turn is not
R. delica sensu Kühner and Romagnesi (1953)… It is best to use
R. brevipes for the North American collections which most authors but not Kühner and Romagnesi (1953), call
R. delica. The name,
R. brevipes, is attached to a type collection, has a reasonably explicit original description, and provides a stable point about which a species concept can be formed. Shaffer defined the
Russula brevipes varieties acrior and
megaspora in 1964 from
Californian specimens. The former is characterized by a greenish-blue band that forms at the top of the stipe, while the latter variety has large spores. The nomenclatural database
Index Fungorum does not consider these varieties to have independent taxonomical significance. In a 2012 publication, mycologist Mike Davis and colleagues suggest that western North American
Russula brevipes comprise a
complex of at least four distinct species. According to
MycoBank, the European species
Russula chloroides is synonymous with
R. brevipes, although Index Fungorum and other sources consider them distinct species. The
specific epithet brevipes is derived from the
Latin words
brevis "short" and
pes "foot", hence "short-footed".
Common names used to refer to the mushroom include short-stemmed russula, short-stalked white russula, and stubby brittlegill. ==Description==