The common diving petrel was
formally described in 1777 by the German naturalist
Johann Reinhold Forster. He placed it with the other petrels in the
genus Procellaria and coined the
binomial name Procellaria tridactyla. Gmelin based his description on the "diving petrel" that had been described in 1785 by the English ornithologist
John Latham in the second volume of his
A General Synopsis of Birds. Latham reported that they were found in great numbers in
Queen Charlotte Sound at the northern end of
South Island, New Zealand. The common diving petrel is now one of four petrels placed in the
genus Pelecanoides that was introduced in 1799 by the French naturalist
Bernard Germain de Lacépède. The genus name,
Pelecanoides, means "Pelican-resembling", which was assigned to the diving petrels on account of their expandable throat pouches that they use to carry food. Its specific name,
urinatrix, is derived from the
Latin term,
urinator, which means "diver". Its subspecies' names include
chathamensis, referring to the
Chatham Islands,
exsul, meaning "isolated" or "remote",
dacunhae, referring to the
Tristan da Cunha Islands,
berard, honoring French navigator Auguste Bérard, and
coppingeri, which honors
Royal Navy surgeon and
naturalist Richard William Coppinger. There are six subspecies (also listed above), which vary in body measurements, particularly bill size: •
P. u. urinatrix (J. F. Gmelin, 1789):
Australia,
Tasmania and
North Island,
New Zealand. •
P. u. chathamensis (
Murphy & Harper, 1916):
Stewart,
Snares, and
Chatham Islands of New Zealand. •
P. u. exsul (
Salvin, 1896):
South Georgia,
Subantarctic islands of the
Indian Ocean such as the
Kerguelen,
Heard and McDonald islands, etc., and subantarctic islands of New Zealand, including the
Auckland Islands,
Antipodes Island, and
Campbell Island. •
P. u. dacunhae (Nicoll, 1906):
Tristan da Cunha archipelago and
Gough Island. •
P. u. berard (
Gaimard, 1823):
Falkland Islands, also distributed throughout the Southwest
Atlantic. •
P. u. coppingeri (
Mathews, 1912): Distribution uncertain, possibly breeds in Southern
Chile. ==Description==