The genus
Holmgrenanthe was established in 1985 by
Wayne J. Elisens solely for the species
H. petrophila, previously placed in
Maurandya (including
Maurandella). Elisens considered the species sufficiently different from other members of
Maurandya to warrant a new genus. For example, it has short mat-forming stems, rather than long climbing or scrambling stems; the edges of the leaves and sepals are spiny; the ovary has a single chamber rather than two. The generic name honors Arthur H., Noel H., and Patricia K. Holmgren, described by Elisens as "dedicated botanists and students of the western flora." The genus is placed in the tribe Antirrhineae, originally part of the family Scrophulariaceae, but now in the Plantaginaceae. Within this tribe, Elisens defined the subtribe Maurandyinae for the five North American genera
Holmgrenanthe,
Lophospermum,
Mabrya,
Maurandya and
Rhodochiton (the last of which he included in
Lophospermum).
Phylogeny Lack of relevant information has led to
Holmgrenanthe being excluded from the
molecular phylogenetic studies confirming that Elisen's Maurandyinae together with
Asarina and
Cymbalaria form a
monophyletic group (clade), but analyses based on morphological characters suggest that
Holmgrenanthe was the first diverging genus within the clade, retaining features of the earliest ancestor. The cladogram presented by Ghebrehiwet is shown below: }}
Species The sole species in the genus,
Holmgrenanthe petrophila, was first described in 1935 by
Frederick Vernon Coville and
Conrad Vernon Morton (as
Maurandya petrophila). They did not explain the origin of the specific epithet, but
petro- is derived from the Greek for rock and
-phila from the Greek for beloved, so that
petrophila means "rock-loving". The plants described by Coville and Morton were growing in a north facing vertical limestone wall in
Titus Canyon in
Death Valley, California. As noted above, the species was transferred to the new genus by Elisens in 1985. ==Distribution and habitat==