The species was first formally described by the
botanists
Denis John Carr and
Stella Grace Maisie Carr in 1981 and the description was published in the
Australian Journal of Botany. The
type specimen was collected by
Alex George on Middle Mount Barren in 1970. The
specific epithet (
conferruminata) is from the
Latin conferruminatus meaning "fused", referring to the fused buds and fruit. In 2008,
Dean Nicolle,
Malcolm French and
Nathan McQuoid described two subspecies of
E. conferruminata and the names have been accepted by the
Australian Plant Census: •
Eucalyptus conferruminata D.J.Carr & S.G.M.Carr subsp.
conferruminata that has an operculum more than wide at the base; •
Eucalyptus conferruminata subsp.
recherche D.Nicolle & M.E.French that has an operculum less than wide at the base.
E. conferruminata belongs in Eucalyptus subgenus
Symphyomyrtus section
Bisectae subsection
Hadrotes because the coarsely bisected cotyledons, erect stamens and larger thick rimmed fruits. The subsection
Hadrotes contains ten species of which eight do not have oil glands in the branchlet pith. Together these eight species form series
Lehmannianae, a group that have fruit with exserted valves that have fused tips even after the seeds are lost, a feature also shared with the distantly related
Eucalyptus cornuta. Of the eight species in series
Lehmannianae four species,
E. conferruminata,
E. lehmannii,
E. mcquoidii and
E. arborella all have the buds in an axillary cluster that is fused basally. ==Distribution==