The grey-winged trumpeter was
formally described in 1758 by the Swedish naturalist
Carl Linnaeus in the
tenth edition of his
Systema Naturae under current the
binomial name Psophia crepitans. Linnaeus based his account on the earlier description by the French naturalist
Pierre Barrère. Linnaeus specified the
type locality as "America meridionali" but this is now restricted to
Cayenne in
French Guiana based on Barrère. The specific epithet is
Latin meaning "breaking wind" or "resounding". The grey-winged trumpeter's taxonomy is unsettled. The
International Ornithological Committee (IOC), the South American Classification Committee of the
American Ornithological Society, and the
Clements taxonomy recognise three
subspecies: •
P. c. crepitans Linnaeus, 1758 – Venezuela and southeast Colombia through the Guianas and north Brazil •
P. c. napensis Sclater, PL &
Salvin, 1873 – southeast Colombia to northeast Peru and northwest Brazil •
P. c. ochroptera Pelzeln, 1857 – central north Brazil Some authors treat
P. c. ochroptera as a subspecies of the
pale-winged trumpeter (
P. leucoptera) and
BirdLife International's
Handbook of the Birds of the World treats it as a separate species, the ochre-winged trumpeter. In addition, there has been some suggestion that the other two subspecies also warrant treatment as species. This article follows the three-subspecies model. ==Description==