RhizophoraL.: Die sechs bis sieben Arten besitzen eine pantropische Verbreitung. Neben den aufgeführten Arten wurden die Hybriden Rhizophora ×lamarckii und Rhizophora ×selala beschrieben:
A. M. Juncosa, & P. B. Tomlinson: A historical and taxonomic synopsis of Rhizophoraceae and Anisophylleaceae. In: Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden. Volume 75, 1988, S. 1278–1295.
P. B. Tomlinson: The Botany of Mangroves. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1986, 419 pp. ISBN 0-521-46675-X
↑E. R. Ballment, T. J. Smith III, J. A. Stoddart: Sibling species in the mangrove genus Ceriops (Rhizophoraceae), detected using biochemical genetics. In: Australian Systematic Botany 1988; 1(4): 391 – 397. (csiro.au).
↑Sheue CR, Yang YP, Liu HY, Chou FS, Chang HC, Saenger P, Mangion CP, Wightman G, Yong JWH & Tsai CC: Reevaluating the taxonomic status of Ceriops australis (Rhizophoraceae) based on morphological and molecular evidence. In: Botanical Studies 2009; 50(1): 89-100. (edu.au).
↑Sheue CR, Liu HY, Tsai CC, Yang YP: Comparison of Ceriops pseudodecanrda sp. nov. (Rhizophoraceae), a new mangrove species in Australasia, with related species. In: Botanical Studies 2010; 51: 237-248. (edu.tw [PDF]).
↑Sheue CR, Liu HY, Tsai CC, Rashid SMA, Yong JWH, Yang YP: On the morphology and molecular basis of segregation of Ceriops zippeliana and C. decandra (Rhizophoraceae) from Asia. In: Blumea 2009; 54:220-227. (ingentaconnect.com).
↑Sheue CR, Liu HY & Yong JWH: Kandelia obovata (Rhizophoraceae), a new mangrove species from Eastern Asia. In: Taxon 2003; 52: 287–294. (wiley.com).