The kinglet calyptura was initially described as
Pardalotus cristatus by
Louis Pierre Vieillot in 1818 in the ''Nouveau Dictionnaire d'Histoire Naturelle
on the basis of a specimen collected near Rio de Janeiro. It was later placed in the genus Calyptura
, whose name comes from the Ancient Greek words καλύπτω
"to cover", and ούρά'' "tail", a reference to the kinglet calyptura's very short tail which hardly projects beyond the species' tail-coverts. The specific name
cristata comes from the
Latin word "cristatus"
crested. Its English name references its resemblance to the kinglets of family
Regulidae. The kinglet calyptura had traditionally been placed in the family
Cotingidae and was sometimes called the kinglet cotinga. Within that family it was believed to be closely related to species that were later removed from the family. Some taxonomic systems for a time classified it as
incertae sedis. A study published in 2012 showed that the species belonged instead in family
Tyrannidae in the same subfamily Platyrinchinae as the genera
Neopipo and
Platyrinchus. Between 2012 and 2016 taxonomic systems made that change. The kinglet calyptura is
monotypic. ==History==