The first formal description of a leptospermum was published by Johann Reinhold Forster and Johann Georg Adam Forster in their 1776 book,
Characteres Generum Plantarum. In 1876,
George Bentham described twenty species, but noted the difficulty of discriminating between species. ("The species are very difficult to discriminate.") Of the species he named, only ten remain as valid. In 1979,
Barbara Briggs and
Laurie Johnson published a classification of the family Myrtaceae in the
Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales. Although there have been revisions to their groupings, their paper allowed a systematic examination of species in the genus
Leptospermum. In 1989,
Joy Thompson published a complete revision of the genus. In 2000, O'Brien
et al. published yet another revision, using
matK-based evidence to suggest that
Leptospermum is
polyphyletic, and should be split into persistent, Western non-persistent, and Eastern non-persistent fruiting plants, with
Leptospermum spinescens as an outlier. However, neither phylogeny has been universally accepted. Current estimates recognize about ninety species of
Leptospermum. The genus name (
Leptospermum) means "slender-seeded". ==Distribution and habitat==