The name
Artocarpus is derived from the
Greek words
artos ("bread") and
karpos ("fruit"). This name was coined by
Johann Reinhold Forster and
J. Georg Adam Forster, a father-and-son team of botanists aboard HMS
Resolution on
James Cook's second voyage; they used it in their book
Characteres generum plantarum. It is maintained as a
conserved name. Although fossils of
Artocarpus have been reported from as early as the Late Cretaceous, these fossils generally that lack key diagnostic characters such as that could definitively place them in the genus. The last common ancestor of all living
Artocarpus likely originated in the vicinity of
Borneo, from which
Artocarpus dispersed elsewhere in Asia and Oceania.
Subgenera Recent phylogenetic research, based on leaf arrangement, leaf anatomical characters and stipules, indicates that there are at least two subgenera in
Artocarpus: • Subgenus
Artocarpus: Perianth of fruit is partially
connate (fused). • Subgenus
Pseudojaca: Perianth is entirely connate. • Subgenus
Cauliflori Subgenus
Pseudojaca is allied to the genus
Prainea, and some researchers treat this taxon as a fourth subgenus of
Artocarpus.
Extant species ==Fossil record==