The Alpine accentor was
described by the Italian naturalist
Giovanni Antonio Scopoli in 1769. He coined the
binomial name Sturnus collaris and specified the
type locality as the
Carinthia region of southern Austria. The
specific epithet is from the
Latin collaris "of the neck". This species is now placed in the
genus Prunella that was introduced by the French ornithologist
Louis Pierre Vieillot in 1816. The Alpine accentor, along with the
Altai accentor is sometimes separated from the other accentors, into the genus
Laiscopus. The word "accentor" is from post-classical
Latin and means a person who sings with another. The genus name
Prunella is from the German
Braunelle, "dunnock", a diminutive of
braun, "brown". Nine
subspecies are recognised: •
P. c. collaris (
Scopoli, 1769) — southwest Europe to Slovenia and the Carpathians, northwest Africa •
P. c. subalpina (
Brehm, CL, 1831) — Croatia to Bulgaria and Greece, Crete and southwest Turkey •
P. c. montana (
Hablizl, 1783) — north and east Turkey to the Caucasus and Iran •
P. c. rufilata (
Severtzov, 1879) — northeast Afghanistan and north Pakistan through the mountains of central Asia to west China •
P. c. whymperi (
Baker, ECS, 1915) — west Himalayas •
P. c. nipalensis (
Blyth, 1843) — central and east Himalayas to southcentral China and north Myanmar •
P. c. tibetana (
Bianchi, 1905) — east Tibet •
P. c. erythropygia (
R. Swinhoe, 1870) — east Kazakhstan and southcentral Siberia to northeast Siberia, Japan, Korea and northeast China •
P. c. fennelli Deignan, 1964 — Taiwan == Description==