The common name "lip fern" comes from the position of the sporangia at the edge or lip of the leaf, typical of the genus. The species was first
described in 1843 by
Samuel Botsford Buckley, based on material collected from
limestone rocks on the banks of the
Tennessee River at the foot of
Muscle Shoals, Alabama. The
type specimen is
Buckley s.n. at the
Philadelphia Herbarium. He named it
Pteris alabamensis, for the location where it was collected, also giving rise to the common name. Apparently unaware of this,
John Leonard Riddell also published a description of Buckley's collections in 1853 under the name
Pteris buckleyi. In 1847,
Gustav Kunze (who had grown the plant from spore, provided by
Ferdinand Rugel) transferred the species to the genus
Cheilanthes as
C. alabamensis.
William Jackson Hooker and
John Gilbert Baker, in their second edition of
Synopsis Filicum (1874), separated the genera
Cheilanthes and
Pellaea based on the character of the false indusium, placing species with a continuous indusium into
Pellaea; accordingly, Baker renamed the species
Pellaea alabamensis. However, American manuals did not generally follow this rather artificial distinction; the
Illustrated Flora of Britton and Brown (1896) and the 7th edition of Gray's Manual (1908) both refer to it as
C. alabamensis, the name under which the species was generally known during the 20th Century. Nor did they generally accept
George Edward Davenport's 1894 demotion of the species to a variety of the very similar
Cheilanthes microphylla as
C. microphylla var.
alabamensis. As part of his wide-ranging program of taxonomic revision,
Otto Kuntze argued that the
principle of priority precluded the use of the generic name
Pellaea, and transferred the species to the older genus
Allosorus in 1891. This combination was rendered unnecessary when
Pellaea and
Cheilanthes were conserved over
Allosorus in the
Paris Code published in 1956. The development of molecular phylogenetic methods showed that the traditional circumscription of
Cheilanthes is polyphyletic.
Convergent evolution in arid environments is thought to be responsible for widespread homoplasy in the morphological characters traditionally used to classify it and the segregate genera that have sometimes been recognized. On the basis of molecular evidence, Amanda Grusz and
Michael D. Windham revived the genus
Myriopteris in 2013 for a group of species formerly placed in
Cheilanthes. One of these was
C. alabamensis, which thus became
Myriopteris alabamensis. In 2018,
Maarten J. M. Christenhusz transferred the species to
Hemionitis as
H. alabamensis, as part of a program to consolidate the cheilanthoid ferns into that genus. Members of the genus
Cheilanthes as historically defined (which includes
Myriopteris) are commonly known as "lip ferns" due to the lip-like (false) indusium formed by the leaf margins curling over the sori. The name
Alabama lip fern refers to the
specific epithet. Further molecular studies in
Myriopteris demonstrated the existence of three well-supported clades within the genus.
M. alabamensis is deeply nested in the one informally named the
alabamensis clade by Grusz
et al. ==Distribution and habitat==