Abbott's babbler was
described by the English zoologist
Edward Blyth in 1845 and given the
binomial name Malacocincla abbotti. The
genus name
Malacocincla combines the
Ancient Greek malakos meaning "soft" with modern
Latin cinclus, meaning "
thrush"; referring to the birds' full and drooping plumage. The specific name
abbotti was chosen by Blyth to honour the specimen collector, Lieutenant Colonel J. R. Abbott (1811–1888), who served in British India as Assistant Commissioner of the
Arakan from 1837 to 1845. Blyth erected the new genus
Malacocincla for this species, but subsequent workers placed the species in
Turdinus and
Trichastoma. A revision reinstated its placement in
Malacocincla in 1985. A 2001 study confirmed the cohesiveness of the
Trichastoma group but a 2012 study shows that
M. abbotti and
M. sepiaria are in a clade along with Napothera, while
M. cinereiceps and
M. malaccensis fall into a different clade along with the genus
Trichastoma and several species of
Pellorneum. An isolated population occurs in the Visakhapatnam Ghats, well separated from the nearest main distribution along the Himalayas and was named after Indian ornithologist
K.S.R. Krishna Raju by
Dillon Ripley and
Bruce Beehler in 1985. The
nominate population is from southern Myanmar and extends to southern Tenasserim and northwestern Malaya including the Langkawi Islands. Several other populations of this widespread species have been named as subspecies and not all are recognized. The population in the eastern Himalayas from eastern Nepal to Sikkim and Assam was named as
amabile, but is now considered within the nominate subspecies. Others include
altera (central Laos and Annam),
williamsoni (eastern Thailand and northwestern Cambodia),
obscurior (coastal southeastern Thailand),
olivaceum (Peninsular Thailand and Malaya),
sirense (Borneo, Pulau Mata Siri), and
baweanum (Bawean Island). Eight
subspecies are recognized: •
M. a. abbotti Blyth, 1845 – east Himalayas to central Malay Peninsula •
M. a. krishnarajui Ripley &
Beehler, 1985 – east India •
M. a. williamsoni Deignan, 1948 – east Thailand to south Vietnam •
M. a. obscurior Deignan, 1948 – east Thailand and southwest Cambodia •
M. a. altera Sims, 1957 – central Laos and central Vietnam •
M. a. olivacea Strickland, 1847 – south Malay Peninsula and
Sumatra •
M. a. concreta Büttikofer, 1895 – Borneo and
Belitung Island •
M. a. baweana Oberholser, 1917 –
Bawean Island (north of Java) ==Description==