George Bentham established the genus
Peridiscus in 1862, naming its only species
Peridiscus lucidus. He placed it in a group which he called "Tribus Flacourtieae" and which later would be known as the family
Flacourtiaceae. Bentham wrote no
etymology for this name, but it is generally believed that the name refers to the fact that the stamens are attached along the outer edge of the nectary disk.
Daniel Oliver established the genus
Soyauxia in 1880 for
Soyauxia gabonensis, placing it in the family
Passifloraceae. He named it for the
German botanist and plant collector
Hermann Soyaux, saying "Mons. Soyaux, now settled in the Gaboon, well deserves that his name should be associated with one of his interesting discoveries in that region". and
Peridiscus was, from the outset, one of its most doubtful members. In 1952,
John Brenan named and described
Medusandra, erecting a new family,
Medusandraceae to accommodate it. In 1953, Brenan transferred
Soyauxia from Passifloraceae to Medusandraceae, but few others agreed with his classification. In 1954,
John Hutchinson and
John McEwen Dalziel followed Brenan's treatment in the second edition of their
Flora of West Tropical Africa. Hutchinson, however, soon recanted, explaining in some detail why he thought that
Medusandra and
Soyauxia were not related. In an accompanying article, Charles Russell Metcalfe discussed its close relationship to
Peridiscus. For four decades thereafter, Peridiscaceae was viewed as a family of uncertain taxonomic position, containing two genera. In the year 2000, a
DNA sequence for the
rbcL gene of
Whittonia was produced and used in a
molecular phylogenetic study of the
eudicots. This study placed Peridiscaceae in a
clade with
Elatinaceae and
Malpighiaceae, a very surprising and unexpected result. On the basis of this
phylogeny, the
Angiosperm Phylogeny Group placed Peridiscaceae in
Malpighiales when they published the
APG II system of
plant classification in 2003. It was soon found that the
rbcL sequence for
Whittonia was a
chimera, formed by
DNA from unidentified plants that had contaminated the
sample. No subsequent attempt to extract DNA from
Whittonia has been made. In 2004, using DNA from
Peridiscus, it was shown that Elatinaceae and Malpighiaceae are indeed
sister families and that Peridiscaceae belong to Saxifragales. It had been suspected that
Medusandra might belong somewhere in Malpighiales, but a phylogeny of that order, generated in 2009, placed
Medusandra in Saxifragales. The authors had included
Medusandra and a few other members of Saxifragales in their
outgroup, finding strong support for a clade of [
Medusandra + (
Soyauxia +
Peridiscus)]. When the
APG III system was published in October 2009, Peridiscaceae was
expanded to include
Medusandra and
Soyauxia. John Brenan, 57 years before, had been prescient in his perception of a relationship between
Medusandra and
Soyauxia. == Phylogeny ==