The Eurasian chaffinch was described by the Swedish naturalist
Carl Linnaeus in 1758 in the
10th edition of his
Systema Naturae under its current
binomial name,
Fringilla coelebs.
Fringilla is the Latin word for finch, while
coelebs, a variant of
caelebs, means unmarried or single (as in
celibate). Linnaeus remarked that during the Swedish winter, only the female birds migrated south through Belgium to Italy. The English name comes from the
Old English ceaffinc, where
ceaf is "
chaff" and
finc "
finch". Chaffinches were likely given this name because after farmers thresh their crops, these birds sometimes spend weeks picking through heaps of discarded chaff for grain. The chaffinch is one of the many birds depicted in the marginal decoration of the 15th-century English illuminated manuscript the
Sherborne Missal. The English naturalist
William Turner described the Eurasian chaffinch in his book on birds
Avium praecipuarum, published in 1544. Although the text is in Latin, Turner gives the English name as chaffinche and lists two folk names: sheld-appel and spink. The word
sheld is a dialectal word meaning pied or multicoloured (as in
shelduck). Appel may be related to
Alp, an obsolete word for a bullfinch. The name
spink is probably derived from the bird's call note. The names spink and shell apple are among the many folk names listed for the common chaffinch by Reverend Charles Swainson in his
Provincial Names and Folk Lore of British Birds (1885).
Subspecies A number of
subspecies of the Eurasian chaffinch have been described, based principally on the differences in the pattern and colour of the adult male plumage. Within the "
coelebs group", the gradual
clinal variation over the large geographic range and the extensive
intergradation means that the geographical limits and acceptance of the various subspecies varies between authorities. The
International Ornithologists' Union lists 11 subspecies from this group, whereas Peter Clement in the Birds of the World lists seven and considers the features of the subspecies
balearica (
Mallorca),
caucasica (the southern
Caucasus),
schiebeli (southern Greece,
Crete and western Turkey), and
tyrrhenica (
Corsica) to fall within the variation of the
nominate subspecies. He also suggests that the subspecies
alexandrovi,
sarda,
solomkoi, and
syriaca may represent variations of the nominate subspecies. The authors of a 2009
molecular phylogenetic study on the three subspecies that were recognised on the Canary Islands concluded that they are sufficiently distinct in both
genotype and
phenotype to be considered as separate species within the genus
Fringilla. They also proposed a revised distribution of the subspecies on the islands in which the birds on
La Palma (
palmae) and
El Hierro (
ombrioso) are grouped together as a single subspecies, while the current
canariensis subspecies is split into two, with one subspecies occurring only on
Gran Canaria and the other on
La Gomera and
Tenerife. The results of a study published in 2018 confirmed the earlier findings. The authors formerly described the Gran Canaria variety as a subspecies and coined the
trinomial name Fringilla coelebs bakeri. ;
coelebs group •
F. c. alexandrovi Zarudny, 1916 – northern Iran •
F. c. caucasica Serebrovski, 1925 – Balkans and northern Greece to northern Turkey, central and eastern
Caucasus and northwestern Iran •
F. c. coelebs Linnaeus, 1758 (
nominate subspecies) – Eurasia, from
western Europe and
Asia Minor to
Siberia •
F. c. balearica von Jordans, 1923 –
Iberian Peninsula and the
Balearic Islands •
F. c. gengleri O. Kleinschmidt, 1909 – British Isles •
F. c. sarda Rapine, 1925 –
Sardinia •
F. c. schiebeli Erwin Stresemann, 1925 – southern Greece,
Crete and western Turkey •
F. c. solomkoi Menzbier &
Sushkin, 1913 –
Crimean Peninsula and southwestern Caucasus •
F. c. syriaca J. M. Harrison, 1945 –
Cyprus, southeastern Turkey to northern Iran and Jordan •
F. c. transcaspia Zarudny, 1916 – northeastern Iran and southwestern Turkmenistan •
F. c. tyrrhenica Schiebel, 1910 –
Corsica Syrian chaffinch (Fringilla coelebs syriaca) male.jpg|Male
F. c. syriaca, Cyprus Syrian chaffinch (Fringilla coelebs syriaca) female 2.jpg|Female
F. c. syriaca, Cyprus 20240616 Buchfink ((Fringilla coelebs).jpg|Singing chaffinch ==Description==