The genus was originally defined in 1907 by Ralph C. Benedict as a subgenus of a (broadly defined)
Antrophyum, typified by
Antrophyum boryanum and including three other species (since reduced to two varieties of
Antrophyopsis boryana and the species
A. manniana). Benedict noted that the subgenus was distinguished by sori not sunken into the leaf, forming a complete reticulate network, monolete ("diplanate") spores, bulging tips on the paraphyses on the sori, and bumpy cell walls on the scales of the
stipe. The first molecular phylogenetic study of the vittarioids, by Edmund H. Crane, found
Antrophyum boryanum to be sister to
Scoliosorus ensiformis. As both species share monolete spores, Crane transferred
A. boryanum and
A. mannianum to
Scoliosorus. A more extensive phylogeny using multiple chloroplast markers, published in 2016 by Eric Schuettpelz
et al., placed these species together with
A. bivittatum in a clade sister to the rest of
Antrophyum and distant from
Scoliosorus. In light of their distinctive spore morphology and geographic distribution when compared to the remainder of
Antrophyum, Schuettpelz raised the subgenus to genus level, incorporating the three aforementioned species. ==Distribution==