Droseridites spinosus, the type species, has been recorded from the Tertiary of the Kerguelen Islands and the Miocene of India, including the Warkalli Formation and the Sindhudurg Formation. It is of possible nepenthacean affinity. Specimens identified in the literature as D. cf. spinosus have also been reported from Hungarian Miocene deposits. Droseridites baculatus was described from the Ghazalat-1 Well, Qattara Depression, Egypt. Droseridites echinosporus has been recorded from European Tertiary strata and is a member of a group of similar species that have been interpreted as belonging to the genus Nepenthes. Sites for D. major, a possible nepenthacean species, include the Tertiary of Europe and the Palaeocene-early EoceneRekmangiri Coalfield of Garo Hills, Meghalaya, India. Droseridites parvus was originally described from the lower Eocene Cherry Formation of Assam, India. It has also been recorded from the PalaeoceneTura Formation of the "Retialetes emendatus zone" in Assam and the Oligocene-Neogene Dharmsala and Siwalik. The species is characterised by wart-like sculpturing and is "presently impossible to interpret". Pollen matching the description of D. senonicus has been found in formations of the Arabian Peninsula dating to as early as the Middle Cretaceous to late Upper Cretaceous, and it has been suggested that this species may represent an early palmtaxon. Unidentified Droseridites palynomorphs have been recorded from numerous sites in India, including the Miocene Cuddalore Formation, the Palaeocene Tura Formation, the Palaeocene Seam No. 1, and the Oligocene-Neogene Dharmsala and Siwalik.
Taxonomy
Pollen of a number of species originally described under the genus Droseridites has been tentatively assigned to Nepenthes. In 1985, Wilfried Krutzsch transferred three species of the "D. echinosporus group", creating the new combinationsNepenthes echinatus, N. echinosporus, and N. major. However, at more than 40 μm in diameter, the tetrads of D. major are larger than those of any known extantNepenthes, and within the lower range of extant Drosera tetrads. Pollen from the Kerguelen Islands originally described as D. spinosus has also been interpreted as belonging to Nepenthes. Some authors consider D. major and D. parvus as synonyms of Nepenthidites laitryngewensis of the Palaeocene Lakadong Sandstone in Laitryngew, Khasi Hills, Meghalaya, India.