The family Aspleniaceae was first described by
Edward Newman in 1840. Newman included three genera:
Athyrium,
Asplenium and
Scolopendrium.
Athyrium is now placed in a different family,
Athyriaceae, not considered very strongly related to the Aspleniaceae, and
Scolopendrium is regarded as synonym of
Asplenium. The narrow
circumscription of the family adopted by the
Pteridophyte Phylogeny Group classification of 2016 (PPG I) recognizes only two genera,
Asplenium and
Hymenasplenium.
Asplenium has previously been split into a dozen or so genera, including
Diella, found only in Hawaii. The consensus of
molecular phylogenetic studies is that all are nested within
Asplenium. PPG I places Aspleniaceae in the suborder
Aspleniineae of the order
Polypodiales. Earlier, Christenhusz and Chase had proposed a much broader circumscription of Aspleniaceae, in which it consisted of all the separate families that PPG I places in the suborder Aspleniineae (eight at the time), with the families reduced to subfamilies. Thus the Aspleniaceae of PPG I became the subfamily Asplenioideae. , the broader circumscription of the Aspleniaceae is used by
Plants of the World Online, which lists 24 genera.
Phylogenic relationships Aspleniaceae is placed in a clade known as eupolypods II, or more formally as suborder
Aspleniineae. The following cladogram, based on Lehtonen (2011) and Rothfels & al. (2012), shows a likely
phylogenic relationship between the Aspleniaceae and the other families in the clade.
Genera In the PPG I system, Aspleniaceae s.s. contains two genera: •
Asplenium L. – about 700 species, worldwide •
Hymenasplenium Hayata – about 40 species, tropical and subtropical ==Distribution and habitat==