The great-billed seed finch was called
Fringilla crassirostris when a female was collected on the eastern coast of Brazil in 1815 by
Prince Maximilian of Wied-Neuwied. Twenty years after his description was published, the seed finch was included in the newly proposed genus
Oryzoborus by
Jean Louis Cabanis (1851). The seed finches were once categorized in the genus
Oryzoborus. They are a group of six species: the chestnut-bellied seed finch (
Oryzoborus angolensis), large-billed seed finch (
Oryzoborus crassirostris), black-billed seed finch (
Oryzoborus atrirostris), thick-billed seed finch (
Oryzoborus funereus), great-billed seed finch (
Oryzoborus maximiliani), and the Nicaraguan seed finch (
Oryzoborus nuttingi). The females of seed finches are very similar in morphology. The taxonomy is therefore almost exclusively based on the male plumages. Further molecular and morphological analyses of the birds led to the genus
Oryzoborus being subsumed into the genus
Sporophila. The great-billed seed finch includes two subspecies: •
S. m. maximiliani which is found mainly in Cerrado, eastern Bolivia, and in the Brazilian states of Goiás, Bahia, Minas Gerais, Espirito Santo, São Paulo, Mato Grosso, and Mato Grosso do Sul. •
S. m. parkesi which is found in southeastern Sucre to Elta Amacuro, northern South America, eastern Venezuela, northern Bolivia, western Guyana, and the northernmost part of Brazil. == Description ==