In 1760 the French zoologist
Mathurin Jacques Brisson described and illustrated the buff-banded rail in his multi-volume
Ornithologie based on a specimen collected in the
Philippines. He used the French name
Le rasle rayé des Philippines and the Latin name
Rallus Philippensis Striatus. Although Brisson coined Latin names, these do not conform to the
binomial system and are not recognised by the
International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature. When in 1766 the Swedish naturalist
Carl Linnaeus updated his
Systema Naturae for the
twelfth edition he added 240 species that had been previously described by Brisson in his
Ornithologie. The buff-banded rail was formerly placed in the genus
Hypotaenidia but is now placed in the genus
Gallirallus that was introduced by
Frédéric de Lafresnaye in 1841.
Subspecies Numerous subspecies are recognised for the buff-banded rail because of repeated dispersion of birds to islands in the Pacific, often followed by
founder effects and reduced potential for
gene flow. The
weka in New Zealand evolved from a lineage with common ancestry to modern buff-tailed banded rail populations, and has changed over time to become
flightless. Twenty
subspecies are recognised: •
G. p. andrewsi (
Mathews, 1911) –
Cocos Islands (southeast Indian Ocean) •
G. p. xerophila van Bemmel & Hoogerwerf, 1940 –
Gunungapi Wetar (
Banda Sea) •
G. p. wilkinsoni (Mathews, 1911) –
Flores (central
Lesser Sunda Islands) •
G. p. philippensis (
Linnaeus, 1766) – Philippines (except
Palawan, and
Zamboanga Peninsula through
Sulu Archipelago),
Borneo,
Sulawesi and satellites,
Bali and
Lesser Sunda Islands •
G. p. pelewensis Mayr, 1933 –
Palau (west
Caroline Islands, west
Micronesia) •
G. p. anachoretae (Mayr, 1949) –
Kaniet Islands (northwest of
Manus Island,
Admiralty Islands, northwest
Bismarck Archipelago) •
G. p. admiralitatis Stresemann, 1929 –
Admiralty Islands (northwest
Bismarck Archipelago) •
G. p. praedo (Mayr, 1949) – Skoki (
Admiralty Islands, northwest
Bismarck Archipelago) •
G. p. lesouefi (Mathews, 1911) –
New Hanover Island,
New Ireland, Tabar and Tanga (northeast
Bismarck Archipelago) •
G. p. meyeri Hartert, EJO, 1930 – Witu and
New Britain (southeast
Bismarck Archipelago) •
G. p. christophori (Mayr, 1938) –
Solomon Islands •
G. p. sethsmithi (Mathews, 1911) –
Vanuatu and
Fiji (probably extinct
Viti Levu and
Vanua Levu; southwest
Polynesia) •
G. p. swindellsi (Mathews, 1911) –
New Caledonia including
Loyalty Islands •
G. p. goodsoni (Mathews, 1911) –
Samoa and
Niue (central south
Polynesia) •
G. p. ecaudata (
Miller, JF, 1783) –
Tonga (central south
Polynesia) •
G. p. assimilis (
Gray, GR, 1843) – north North, north South and satellites of Stewart is. (New Zealand) •
G. p. macquariensis (
Hutton, FW, 1879) –
Macquarie Island (far southeast of Australia) •
G. p. lacustris (Mayr, 1938) – northwest, northeast, central, southeast
New Guinea and
Long Island (north of northeast
New Guinea) •
G. p. tounelieri (
Schodde & Naurois, 1982) –
Coral Sea Islands (southeast
New Guinea to north
New Caledonia) •
G. p. mellori (Mathews, 1912) –
Moluccas, northwest, south
New Guinea, Australia (except central,
Tasmania) and
Norfolk Island (far east of Australia) ==Description==