The western grasswren was
formerly described in 1824 under the
binomial name Malurus textilis in volume 30 of the
Dictionnaire des Sciences Naturelles. The description was based on specimens collected on the
Peron Peninsula of
Shark Bay on the western coast of Australia by the French naturalists
Jean Quoy and
Joseph Gaimard during the circumnavigation of the world by the corvette
Uranie that had been captained by
Louis de Freycinet. A page at the front of the
Dictionaire credits the naturalist
Charles Dumont de Sainte-Croix for the ornithological entries but it is now believed that the text describing the western grasswren was written by Quoy and Gaimard and thus they are considered as the authorities. Later in 1824, a volume on the circumnavigation by the
Uranie was published that included a very similar description of the western grasswren by Quoy and Gaimard. The western grasswren is now one of 14 grasswrens placed in the genus
Amytornis that was named in 1885 by the French zoologist
Marie Jules César Savigny. Three subspecies are recognised: •
A. t. textilis (
Quoy &
Gaimard, 1824) – far west
Western Australia (west Australia) • †
A. t. macrourus (
Gould, 1847) – southwest Australia (extinct) •
A. t. myall (
Mathews, 1916) – south South Australia (central south Australia) ==Description==