Psophia undulata was the
scientific name proposed by
Joseph Franz von Jacquin in 1784 who described a houbara brought from
Tripoli to
Vienna's
Tiergarten Schönbrunn.
Otis macqueenii was proposed by
John Edward Gray in 1832 for a bustard from
India drawn by
Thomas Hardwicke. The African houbara was subordinated to the genus
Chlamydotis by
René Lesson in 1839.
Houbara fuertaventurae was proposed by
Walter Rothschild and
Ernst Hartert in 1894 for a houbara from
Fuerteventura island.
MacQueen's bustard was long regarded a
subspecies of the African houbara. It was proposed as a distinct
species in 2003 because of differences in plumage, vocalizations and courtship behaviour. The
British Ornithologists' Union's Taxonomic Records Committee's decision to accept this split has been questioned on the grounds that the differences in the male courtship displays may be functionally trivial, and would not prevent interbreeding, whereas a difference in a pre-copulation display would indicate that the two are separate species. The committee responded to this scepticism, by explaining that there are differences in both courtship and pre-copulation displays. Results of analysis of
mitochondrial DNA sequences of 73
Chlamydotis samples indicates that the houbara bustard and MacQueen's bustard
genetically diverged around 430,000 years ago from a
common ancestor. The divergence between the African and
Canarian houbara was estimated at 20,000 to 25,000 years ago. ==Distribution and habitat==