The genus is divided into two sections, with the atypical
C. macleayana in sect.
Octoclinis, and all the other species in sect.
Callitris. Some botanists treat
C. macleayana in a separate genus, as
Octoclinis macleayana.
C. macleayana is also distinct in occurring in
rainforest on the east coast of Australia; the other species all grow on dry sites. The closest relative of
Callitris is
Actinostrobus from southwest
Western Australia, which differs in its cones having several basal whorls of small sterile scales. A 2010 study of
Actinostrobus and
Callitris places the three species of
Actinostrobus within an expanded
Callitris based on analysis of 42 morphological and anatomical characters. In 2010, early
Oligocene fossilised foliage and cones of
Callitris were unearthed near the
Lea River in
Tasmania. The fossils were given the name
Callitris leaensis and represent the oldest known representative of the genus.
Species The genus includes the following species: •
Callitris arenosa Sweet,
nom. inval., nom. nud., type not cited, identity uncertain. •
Callitris columellaris f.
glauca F.M.Bailey, described from Qld, type not located, identity uncertain (Hill, 1998). •
Callitris conglobata Heynh., nom. inval., nom. nud, described from New Holland, type not located, identity uncertain. •
Callitris elegans Heynh. (or
Sieber ex Heynh.), nom. inval., nom. nud, described from "
New Holland", type not located, identity uncertain. •
Callitris intermedia' R.T.Baker & H.G.Sm., nom. inval., identity uncertain (Hill, 1998). •
Callitris montana Heynh., nom. inval., nom. nud, described from New Holland, type not located, identity uncertain. •
Callitris pyramidalis Sweet, nom. inval., nom. nud, syn.
Frenela pyramidalis (Sweet) Parl., nom. inval., nom. nud, type not cited, identity uncertain. •
Callitris macrocarpa Vent., nom. inval. nom. nud, syn
Cupressus macrocarpa (Vent.) A.Cunn., nom. inval., identity uncertain. ==Human use==