The common reed warbler was
formally described in 1804 by the French naturalist
Johann Hermann under the
binomial name Turdus scirpaceus. The
type locality is Alsace. The common reed warbler is now one of around 40 species placed in the genus
Acrocephalus that was introduced by
Johann Andreas Naumann and his son
Johann Friedrich Naumann in 1811. The genus name
Acrocephalus is from
Ancient Greek akros, "highest", and
kephale, "head". It is possible that the Naumanns thought
akros meant "sharp-pointed". The specific
scirpaceus is from
Latin and means "reed". Ten
subspecies are recognised: •
A. s. ammon Hering, Winkler & Steinheimer, 2016 – Oases along the Libya-Egypt border region •
A. s. ambiguus (
Brehm, AE, 1857) –
Iberian Peninsula and northwest Africa •
A. s. minor Lynes, 1923 – Sahel region from Senegal to west-central Sudan (Darfur) •
A. s. cinnamomeus Reichenow, 1908 – west Ethiopia and south Somalia south through South Sudan, Uganda, Kenya, Zambia and Mozambique; patchy distribution in west Africa from south Cameroon to possibly Niger and Mali •
A. s. suahelicus Grote, 1926 – east Tanzania to east Mozambique and eastern South Africa •
A. s. hallae White, CMN, 1960 – southwest Angola to southwest Zambia and south to western South Africa •
A. s. baeticatus (
Vieillot, 1817) – north Botswana and Zimbabwe to southern South Africa An older scientific name for the reed warbler was
Acrocephalus streperus (Vieill.). The mostly resident Iberian and African subspecies are sometimes treated as a separate species, the African reed warbler (
Acrocephalus baeticatus). ==Description==