The species
Poephila acuticauda was first described by ornithologist
John Gould in 1840, placing the new taxon as
Amadina acuticauda. The specimen was collected by
Benjamin Bynoe, the surgeon aboard
HMS Beagle, at
Derby on the north-west coast of Australia. A variety of subspecific arrangements had been regarded as colour variation across an east to west cline, although the geographically distinct morphology came to be acknowledged in the late twentieth century. Further support was given in a genetic study published in 2005 showed that the two
subspecies of the long-tailed finch were separated from each other by the Kimberley Plateau–Arnhem Land Barrier around 340,000 years ago, and their ancestors diverged from the
black-throated finch (
P. cincta) across the Carpentarian Barrier 600 thousand years ago. The
Australian Faunal Directory recognises three
Poephila species, arranged as two subgenera, the population is also separated as two subspecies. This treatment may be summarised as genus
Poephila • subgenus
Poephila (
Neopoephila) Mathews, 1913 • subgenus
Poephila (
Poephila) Gould, 1842 • species
Poephila (
Poephila)
cincta (Gould, 1837) • species '''
Poephila (
Poephila)
acuticauda''' (Gould, 1840) • subspecies
Poephila (
Poephila)
acuticauda acuticauda • subspecies
Poephila (
Poephila)
acuticauda hecki Heinroth, 1900 Common names for the species have been assigned or arisen from usage in aviculture, these include the long-tailed finch or longtail, blackheart finch, shaft-tail finch, orange-billed finch or grassfinch. Heck's grassfinch or finch, or Heck's longtail is applied to the eastern subspecies
Poephila acuticauda hecki with red beaks, and the nominate subspecies with orange or yellow beaks is referred by the common name for the species. ==Description==