This species was first described in 1900 by the Australian botanist
Frederick Manson Bailey as
Argophyllum nitidum var.
fulvum. His description was based on material collected on the slopes of
Mount Bellenden Ker in 1887 by W.A. Sayer, and it was published in his work
The Queensland Flora. In 1907 the species was given its current combination by the Austrian botanist
Margarete Zemann. In a 2018 paper by botanists
Anthony Russell Bean and
Paul Irwin Forster, the genus
Argophyllum in Australia was reviewed and the combination
Argophyllum cryptophlebum was maintained. A
lectotype for the species was also nominated in the paper.
Etymology The genus name
Argophyllum is constructed from the Ancient Greek words
Ἄργος (
argós), meaning bright or shining, and
φύλλον (
phúllon), meaning leaf. It refers to the shiny undersides of the leaves of the genus. The
species epithet cryptophlebum is also from Ancient Greek words, namely
κρυπτός (
krúptō), meaning hidden, and
φλέψ (
phléps), meaning vein. It is unclear what Zemann was referring to but it is likely to be the obscure tertiary venation. ==Distribution and habitat==