The species was first
described in 1842 as
Allosorus pulchellus by
Martin Martens &
Henri Guillaume Galeotti, based on material collected by Galeotti in Mexico. The
type specimen is
Galeotti 6352 at the
Brussels herbarium. The epithet
pulchellus means "small and beautiful" and presumably reflects the aesthetic appeal of the species, which they described as "charmante". However, that name had already been used in 1836 for a different species, the former
Cheilanthes pulchella, by
Carl Borivoj Presl, rendering it nomenclaturally illegitimate.
Frederik Liebmann recognized the issue and corrected it by giving Martens & Galeotti's species the
replacement name Allosorus formosus in 1849; the epithet
formosus means "beautiful". Delineating natural genera in the cheilanthoids has proven to be extremely difficult, and other placements of the species were subsequently put forward, mostly as replacement names for
A. pulchellus in other genera using the same epithet.
Fée transferred it to
Pellaea as
Pellaea pulchella in 1852. In 1857,
Thomas Moore, in his
Index Filicum, transferred it to
Platyloma, a genus he recognized as a segregate from
Pellaea, as
Platyloma pulchellum.
John Smith, in 1866, preferred to recognize a different cheilanthoid segregate,
Cincinalis, and placed it there as
Cincinalis pulchella. In 1922,
William Ralph Maxon created a new combination for Liebmann's name in
Pellaea, as
Pellaea formosa due to the illegitimacy of Martens & Galeotti's name, although subsequent changes to the practice of nomenclature would make it superfluous.
Oliver Atkins Farwell, following a program of reviving what he considered to be senior synonyms, gave
Cassebeera priority over
Pellaea and transferred the species there as
Cassebeera pulchella in 1931. Maxon and
Charles Alfred Weatherby placed
Pellaea formosa within a group of ferns closely related to
Notholaena nivea, but declined to make a nomenclatural transfer until the classification of the cheilanthoids was better understood. Both
Edwin Copeland and Weatherby suggested in the 1940s that this group of ferns might represent a distinct genus of its own. This was finally addressed in 1987 by
Michael D. Windham, who was carrying out phylogenetic studies of these genera. He elevated
Notholaena sect.
Argyrochosma to become the genus
Argyrochosma, and transferred this species to that genus as
A. formosa. Meanwhile, John Mickel and Joe Beitel had transferred the species to
Cheilanthes as
C. formosa in their monograph on the ferns of
Oaxaca, which was published in 1988; Mickel and Alan R. Smith recognized
Argyrochosma in 2004 when preparing a fern flora of Mexico. In 2018,
Maarten J. M. Christenhusz transferred the species to
Hemionitis as
H. formosa, as part of a program to consolidate the cheilanthoid ferns into that genus. Phylogenetic studies have shown that
A. formosa is a
sister species to
A. microphylla; these two species form a
clade sister to another clade containing
A. jonesii and
A. lumholtzii. All four species lack farina, and their common ancestor is hypothesized to have diverged from the ancestor of the rest of the genus before farina production developed in the latter. ==Distribution and habitat==