The bay-headed tanager was
formally described by the Swedish naturalist
Carl Linnaeus in 1758 in the
tenth edition of his
Systema Naturae under the
binomial name Fringilla gyrola. The specific epithet is a diminutive of the
Latin gyrus meaning "ring". Linnaeus based his own description on the "red-headed green-finch" that had been described and illustrated by the English naturalist
George Edwards in 1743 in his
A Natural History of Uncommon Birds. The
type locality is
Suriname. The bay-headed tanager is now placed in the genus
Tangara that was introduced by the French zoologist
Mathurin Jacques Brisson in 1760. Nine
subspecies are recognised: •
T. g. bangsi (
Hellmayr, 1911) – Nicaragua to west Panama •
T. g. deleticia (
Bangs, 1908) – east Panama to central, west Colombia •
T. g. nupera Bangs, 1917 – southwest Colombia, west Ecuador and northwest Peru •
T. g. toddi Bangs & Penard, TE, 1921 – north Colombia and northwest, north Venezuela •
T. g. viridissima (
Lafresnaye, 1847) – northeast Venezuela and Trinidad •
T. g. catharinae (Hellmayr, 1911) – central Colombia through east Ecuador and east Peru to west, central Bolivia •
T. g. parva Zimmer, JT, 1943 – east Colombia, south Venezuela, northeast Peru, and northwest Brazil •
T. g. gyrola (
Linnaeus, 1758) – southeast Venezuela, the Guianas and north Brazil •
T. g. albertinae (
Pelzeln, 1877) – central Brazil south of Amazon ==Description==