The genus
Aegialitis was described by
Robert Brown in his 1810 work
Prodromus Florae Novae Hollandiae et Insulae Van Diemen when he described the single species
A. annulata. The second species was described by
William Roxburgh in the 1830s. A genus of
grasses was given the same genus name in 1820 by
Carl Bernhard von Trinius and later renamed
Rostraria. There have been several opinions on the proper placement of the genus in relation to the rest of the Plumbaginaceae, though most authors have noted its distinct characteristics make it difficult to place properly. In 1968
Igorj Alexandrovich Linczevski suggested that the genus be included in its own
monotypic family, the Aegialitidaceae. The Plumbaginaceae has historically been divided into either two subfamilies or two tribes and each approach has offered a different perspective of the proper taxonomic relationship in the family. Through
cladistic analysis using both genetic and morphological characteristics, studies have concluded that
Aegialitis is the sister
taxon to the rest of its subfamily (Staticoideae) and thus has been assigned to the monotypic tribe Aegialitideae, which is sister to the tribe
Staticeae (including the genera
Acantholimon,
Armeria,
Goniolimon,
Limoniastrum, and
Limonium). == Distribution and habitat ==