When it was first described,
Micropholis was recognized as a '
labyrinthodont,' an outdated term used to refer to extinct 'amphibians' in a broad sense. However, Huxley remarked that it did not show close affinities with any of the known Triassic labyrinthodonts of the time. Its uncertain affinities continued to plague paleontologists who remarked that "no types really closely allied to it have been found". As a result, it was placed within its own family, Micropholidae, and sometimes within its own superfamily, Micropholoidea. Although it was suggested in the 1930s that
Micropholis might be allied with dissorophoids by comparison with the
dissorophid Broiliellus, this idea was not widely adopted Subsequent discovery of
amphibamiforms, either referred to monotaxic families such as Doleserpetontidae or to Dissorophidae, has further strengthened the placement of
Micropholis among dissorophoids, which has since been maintained by computer-assisted phylogenetic analyses.
Micropholis now belongs to the recently resurrected family Micropholidae, which is included in what was historically termed
Amphibamidae (now Amphibamiformes). However, its placement has long been perplexing because it retains numerous plesiomorphies and is usually recovered as one of the earlier diverging amphibamiforms despite being tens of millions of years younger than all other dissorophoids. Below is a phylogeny from Schoch (2018) showing the position of
Micropholis. ==References==