The pheasant-tailed jacana was described by the
French explorer
Pierre Sonnerat in his 1776
Voyage à la Nouvelle Guinée, in which he included an illustration of the bird that he called "Le Chirurgien de l'Isle de Luzon" or the surgeon of the island of Luzon. He described a bird with the long toes and the elongated feather extensions resembling the lancets used for blood-letting by surgeons of the period. Based on this description, the bird was given a
binomial by
Giovanni Scopoli in 1787 in his
Deliciae Florae et Faunae Insubricae (Pars II), where he placed it in the genus
Tringa. He retained the name
chirurgus for the specific name. It was later placed in the genus
Parra (under the junior synonym
Parra luzonensis) along with other jacanas, and later still, the genera within the jacana family (then called Parridae) were separated. The genus
Hydrophasianus, meaning "water pheasant", was erected by
Johann Georg Wagler in 1832 as the species was distinctive in having a slender bill, lacking any frontal lappet, having a shorter hind claw than
Metopidius, bearing on the outer two primaries lanceolate elongations, and having a pointed fourth primary. The distinct breeding and non-breeding plumage is unique within the jacanas.
Measurements The following are standard
measurements from a study based on living specimens during the breeding season in Thailand. They are averaged from 17 males and 4 females. A few measurements are from Rasmussen and Anderton (2005), where the head measurement (range given rather than mean) is from the tip of the bill to the back of the skull. Body mass measurements can vary widely based on physiological conditions and are generally not used for taxonomic purposes. A dataset from the Philippines gives the body mass ranges as in males and in females. ==Distribution and habitat==