This genus was first described by the Austrian
myriapodologist Carl Attems in 1904 to contain the newly discovered
type species T. fastigata, found in Kyrgyzstan. He described this genus as having the usual 30 segments. In 1979, the Russian myriapodologist
Sergei I. Golovatch of the
Academy of Sciences of the Soviet Union described another species in this genus,
T. ornata, found in Kazakhstan. Golovatch originally described
T. ornata as having 30 segments. In 1987, Shear described another four species in this genus, all found in Nepal. He found that the smaller two species,
T. daamsae and
T. mananga, have only 28 segments as adults, and the larger two,
T. ausobskyi and
T. gitanga, have 29 segments as adults, a number never recorded before in the order Chordeumatida. In 1988, the French myriapodologist
Jean-Paul Mauriès of the
Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle in
Paris described another four species,
T. jaljalensis,
T. katmandua,
T. mangsingma, and
T. smetanai, all found in Nepal and all featuring only 29 segments as adults. Furthermore, Mauriès reports that Golovatch reexamined the
type specimens of
T. ornata and found that adults of that species have 29 segments rather than the 30 segments reported in the original description. Mauriès also examined the type specimens of
T. martensi and found them to have 29 segments rather than the 30 segments indicated by the original description by Shear. Mauriès found the holotype of
T. fastigata to be too poorly preserved to determine the number of segments and did not examine any specimens of
T. bobanga or
T. lughla, but he suspects that these species also have 29 segments rather than the 30 segments indicated by the original descriptions. Thus, at least eight
Tianella species have 29 segments as adults, two have 28 segments, and the other three were originally described as having 30 segments but may have 29 segments instead. == Description ==