Troglocladodus trimblei was named in 2024 by John-Paul M. Hodnett and coauthors. The genus and species are known from isolated teeth found in
limestones of the
St. Louis Formation and overlying
Ste. Genevieve Formation within the
Mammoth Cave System in the U.S. state of Kentucky, as well as from the
Bangor Formation of Franklin County, Alabama. The Mammoth Cave material has been dated to the
Visean stage of the
Mississippian subperiod, while the Bangor Formation material is dated to the younger
Serpukhovian stage. Of the seven specimens assigned in the taxon's formal description, a complete tooth,
catalogued as MACA 62062, was made the
holotype. The genus name is derived from the
Greek roots τρώγλη or
trṓglē (meaning 'cave' or 'hole'), κλάδος or
kládos (meaning 'branch') and ὀδούς or
odoús (meaning 'tooth'), The only known species,
C. trimblei, is named in honor of Barclay Trimble, who discovered the holotype specimen and who is the superintendent of Mammoth Cave National Park. == Description ==