The first formal description of
Chlorophytum comosum was by the Swedish naturalist
Carl Peter Thunberg as
Anthericum comosum in the 1794 volume of
Prodromus Plantarum Capensium, Thunberg's work on the plants of South Africa. The species was subsequently moved to a number of different genera, including
Phalangium,
Caesia,
Hartwegia Nees, and
Hollia, before receiving its current placement in
Chlorophytum by Jacques in 1862. Delimitation of species boundaries within the genus
Chlorophytum is reported to be difficult, possibly because of several evolutionary radiations into forest environments that led to morphological aspects that are too similar to reliably distinguish separate species. The evidence given to support this is the widespread distribution of most taxa in the genus and poor seed dispersal, leading to the conclusion of deeper evolutionary divergence among the taxa. The three described
varieties in
C. comosum could be an example of this
convergent evolution of leaf shape among the forest-dwelling varieties from species of disparate origin, leading to the species
C. comosum being
polyphyletic, instead of the traditional view of morphological divergence among the varieties within the species with the assumption of a common origin (
monophyly). The widespread
C. comosum var.
comosum has slender, near linear leaves that lack a petiole similar to plants found in cultivation and is only found growing at the margins of the rainforest. The two other varieties,
C. comosum var.
sparsiflorum and
C. comosum var.
bipindense, possess petioles and have broader leaves necessary for collecting more light in the shady
Guineo-Congolean rainforest. A study published in 2005 used 16 morphological characters and was unable to delimit species boundaries among these three taxa, so they were relegated to varietal status. == Distribution ==