The eastern spot-billed duck was
described by the English biologist
Robert Swinhoe in 1866 under its current
binomial name Anas zonorhyncha. The name of the genus
Anas is the Latin word for a duck. The specific epithet
zonorhyncha is derived from the classical Greek words
zōnē meaning "band" or "girdle" and
rhunkhos meaning "bill". Historically, the eastern spot-billed duck was usually considered as a
subspecies of the Indian spot-billed duck (
A. poecilorhyncha). The American ornithologist
Bradley Livezey in a morphological study of the
dabbling ducks published in 1991 proposed that the eastern spot-billed duck should be promoted to species status. Subsequently, fieldwork conducted at Hong Kong in southern China found that although both the eastern spot-billed duck and the Indian spot-billed duck (subspecies
A. poecilorhyncha haringtoni) bred in the region at the same time, mixed pairs were only very rarely observed. Base on this observation, the
American Ornithologists' Union recognised the eastern spot-billed duck as a separate species in 2008. Most taxonomists now treat the eastern spot-billed duck as a separate species. There is also some degree of hybridization with the mallard in the wild in eastern Russia with a tendency for a greater ratio of male eastern spot-billed ducks to mate with female mallards than the other way round. ==Description==