The dipterocarp family is generally divided into two subfamilies: }} }} • Dipterocarpoideae: the largest of the subfamilies, it contains 13 genera and about 475 species. Distribution includes the
Seychelles,
Sri Lanka, India,
Southeast Asia to
New Guinea, and a large distribution in Borneo, where they form the dominant species in the lowland forests. North Borneo (
Brunei,
Sabah, and
Sarawak) is the richest area in the world for dipterocarp species. and the tribe names Shoreae and Dipterocarpeae are sometimes used, but genetic evidence so far does not support this division: •
Valvate -
Dipterocarpeae group (
Anisoptera,
Cotylelobium,
Dipterocarpus,
Stemonoporus,
Upuna,
Vateria,
Vateriopsis,
Vatica). The genera of this group have valvate sepals in fruit, solitary vessels, scattered resin canals, and basic chromosome number x = 11. •
Imbricate -
Shoreae group (
Anthoshorea,
Doona,
Dryobalanops,
Hopea,
Neobalanocarpus,
Neohopea,
Parashorea,
Pentacme,
Richetia,
Rubroshorea, and
Shorea). The genera of this group have imbricate sepals in fruit, grouped vessels, resin canals in tangential bands, and basic chromosome number x = 7. The genera in the tribe have been substantially reorganized based on recent molecular. •
Monotoideae: three genera, 30 species.
Marquesia is native to
Africa.
Monotes has 26 species, distributed across Africa and Madagascar.
Pseudomonotes is native to the Colombian Amazon. A recent genetic study found that the Asian dipterocarps share a common ancestor with the
Sarcolaenaceae, a tree family endemic to Madagascar. This suggests that ancestor of the dipterocarps originated in the southern supercontinent of
Gondwana, and that the common ancestor of the Asian dipterocarps and the Sarcolaenaceae was found in the India-Madagascar-Seychelles land mass millions of years ago, and were carried northward by India, which later collided with Asia and allowed the dipterocarps to spread across Southeast Asia and Malaysia. Although associated with Southeast Asia in contemporary times, recent studies using fossil pollen and molecular data suggest an African origin in the mid-cretaceous. Prior to this research, the first dipterocarp pollen was found in Myanmar (which at that time was part of the
Indian Plate) and it dates from the upper
Oligocene. The sample appears to slowly increase in terms of diversity and abundance across the region into the mid-
Miocene. Subfamily Pakaraimoideae containing the sole genus
Pakaraimaea, formerly placed here and native to the
Guaianan highlands of South America, is now found to be more closely related the
Cistaceae and is placed there in the
APG IV (2016). ==Fossilized arthropods==