The name Cephalotaxus lanceolata was described in Cheng et al. (1975: 86) and ascribed to K. M. Feng, but there was no indication in that publication that the diagnosis of the new species was provided by K. M. Feng. Likewise, in Cheng et al. (1978), “Flora Reipublicae Popularis Sinicae”, no author contribution by K. M. Feng was acknowledged. Consequently, under Art. 46.5 of the ICN (Turland et al. 2018), this name should be attributed to the authors of the publication and cited as “K. M. Feng ex W. C. Cheng et al.” or just “W. C. Cheng et al.”. As a result, the attribution of this name to K. M. Feng by Cheng (1983), Farjon (2010) and Lang et al. (2013a, 2013b) is incorrect.
Lang et al. (2013a, 2013b) considered Cephalotaxus lanceolata W. C. Cheng et al. to be an illegitimate later homonym because they thought that there was an earlier homonym, C. lanceolataBeissner (1901a). Therefore, they proposed the replacement name C. talonensis W. C. Cheng & L. K. Fu ex S. G. Lu & X. D. Lang taking up a manuscript name that W. C. Cheng & L. K. Fu and/or K. M. Feng had used on the original specimen. If Lang et al.’s claim was correct, then a replaced name would indeed be required.
I conducted a new investigation on the publications of Beissner (1901a, 1901b, 1909) and found that Beissner did not accept C. lanceolata as the name of a species in any of the three publications and so it is not validly published in any of them (Art. 36.1). Beissner (1909) treated C. lanceolata as a synonym of “Cephalotaxus fortunei robusta hort.”, so clearly not accepting the name and the same is the case in the two 1901 publications: Beissner (1901b) wrote: “Nous devons dès lors regarder le C. lanceolata hort. comme une forme vigoureuse, multipliée par greffe, de C. fortunei Hook.” Translated to English as: I must therefore look at C. lanceolata hort. as a vigorous, graft-propagated form of C. fortunei Hook. Beissner (1901a) wrote: “Damit erledigt sich dann auch der zweite Punkt, dass C. lanceolata hört, nicht mit C. griffithii gleich ist, sondern als besonders langblättrige, üppige, durch Veredelung fixierte Form zu C. fortunei Hook, gehören dürfte.” This suggests that C. lanceolata hort. is not the same as C. griffithii, but should belong to C. fortunei Hook. as a particularly long-leaved, luxuriant form fixed by grafting.
As a conclusion, I consider that C. lanceolata should be ascribed to K. M. Feng ex W. C. Cheng et al. and that C. lanceolata K. M. Feng ex W. C. Cheng et al. is a legitimate name.
The taxonomic status of C. lanceolata has been in debate. The name was accepted in Cheng et al. (1978), Cheng (1983), Fu (1984), Huo (1986), Farjon (1998, 2010, 2017) and Fu et al. (1999) as that of a distinct species, but Silba (1990) treated it as a variety: C. fortunei var. lanceolata (K. M. Feng ex W. C. Cheng et al.) Silba, which is also accepted by Eckenwalder (2009). Tripp (1995) considered C. lanceolata as a separate species from C. griffithii Hook. f. but Bisht et al. (2021), who thought the name illegitimate, treated it as a synonym of C. griffithii. Wang et al. (2022) conducted DNA barcoding research by sampling Chinese materials, and concluded that C. lanceolata represented a separate species lineage. Here I follow Tripp (1995), Farjon (1998, 2010, 2017), Fu et al. (1999) and Wang et al. (2022) and accept C. lanceolata as a separate species.