The red-fan parrot was
formally described in 1758 by the Swedish naturalist
Carl Linnaeus in the
tenth edition of his
Systema Naturae. He placed it with all the other parrots in the
genus Psittacus and coined the
binomial name Psittacus accipitrinus. Linnaeus based his description on the "hawk-headed parrot" that had been described and illustrated in 1751 by the English naturalist
George Edwards in the fourth volume of his
A Natural History of Uncommon Birds. Linnaeus mistakenly specified the
type locality as India. It was redesignated as
Cayenne in
French Guiana by
Carl Hellmayr in 1905. The red-fan parrot is now the only species placed in the genus
Deroptyus that was introduced in 1832 by the German naturalist
Johann Wagler. The genus name combines the
Ancient Greek meaning "neck" with meaning "fan". The specific epithet
accipitrinus is from
Latin and means "hawk-like". Two
subspecies are recognised: •
D. a. accipitrinus (
Linnaeus, 1758) – southeast Colombia to northeast Peru, north Brazil and the Guianas •
D. a. fuscifrons Hellmayr, 1905 – central Brazil south of the Amazon == Description ==