Hypsophrys was first proposed as a monospecific genus by the Swiss-born American
naturalist Louis Agassiz in 1859 when he named
Hypsophrys unimaculatus, describing it only as "A second
genus, resembling Chrysophrys, he called Hypsophrys unimaculatus", which would normally be regarded as invalid, as no distinguishing details were given.
Hypsophrys nicaraguensis was first formally
described as
Heros nicaraguensis in 1864 by the German-born British
herpetologist and
ichthyologist Albert Günther, with its
type locality given as
Lake Nicaragua in Nicaragua. of the
subfamily Cichlinae, the American cichlids, of the family Cichlidae,
Neetroplus nematopus, the poor man's tropheus, was briefly brought into
Hypsophrys from the monotypic genus
Neetroplus in 2007. However, genetic analysis in 2016 demonstrated that the poor man's tropheus should be in a separate genus, and resurrected
Neetroplus, restating the old scientific name,
Neetroplus nematopus. ==Etymology==