The double-barred finch was
formally described in 1827 by the naturalists
Nicholas Vigors and
Thomas Horsfield from specimens collected near
Shoalwater Bay and
Broad Sound in
Queensland, Australia. They coined the
binomial name Fringilla bichenovii. The species was formerly placed in the genus
Taeniopygia. A
molecular phylogenetic study of the Estrildidae published in 2020 found that the genus
Taeniopygia was not
monophyletic. In the reorganization to create monophyletic genera, the double-barred finch was moved to the resurrected genus
Stizoptera that had been introduced in 1899 by the American ornithologist
Harry C. Oberholser. The genus name combines the
Ancient Greek stizō meaning "to tattoo" with
pteron meaning "wing". The specific epithet commemorates
James Ebenezer Bicheno, a colonial secretary of
Van Diemen's Land appointed in September 1842. Two
subspecies are recognised: •
S. b. annulosa (
Gould, 1840) – north
Western Australia and
Northern Territory (northwest, north Australia) •
S. b. bichenovii (
Vigors &
Horsfield, 1827) – north
Queensland to southeast
New South Wales (east Australia) == Description==