The brown-throated martin was
formally described in 1817 by the French ornithologist
Louis Pierre Vieillot. He placed it in the genus
Hirundo and coined the
binomial name Hirundo paludicola. The specific epithet
paludicola is
Latin meaning "marsh-dweller" (from
palus,
paludis meaning "swamp" and
-cola meaning "dweller". Vieillot based his account on "L'hirondelle à front roux" from South Africa that had been described and illustrated in 1806 by
François Levaillant. The brown-throated martin is now one of six martins placed in the genus
Riparia that was introduced in 1817 by the German naturalist
Johann Reinhold Forster. It was formerly considered to be
conspecific with the
grey-throated martin (
Riparia chinensis) and the
Madagascar martin (
Riparia cowani). Six subspecies are recognised. •
R. p. mauritanica (
Meade-Waldo, 1901) – west Morocco •
R. p. minor (
Cabanis, 1851) – Senegal and Gambia to north Ethiopia •
R. p. schoensis Reichenow, 1920 – central Ethiopia •
R. p. newtoni Bannerman, 1937 – northeast Nigeria and west Cameroon •
R. p. ducis Reichenow, 1908 – east DRCongo, Uganda, Kenya and north, central Tanzania •
R. p. paludicola (
Vieillot, 1817) – Angola to south Tanzania and south to South Africa ==Description==