The common moorhen was
formally described in 1758 by the Swedish naturalist
Carl Linnaeus in the
tenth edition of his
Systema Naturae. He placed it in the
genus Fulica and coined the
binomial name Fulica chloropus. The common moorhen is now one of five extant species placed in the genus
Gallinula that was introduced in 1760 by the French zoologist
Mathurin Jacques Brisson. The genus name is from
Latin gallinula meaning "little hen" or "little chicken". The specific epithet
chloropus combines the
Ancient Greek khlōros χλωρός meaning "green" and
pous (
πούς) meaning "foot". The closely related
common gallinule G. galeata of the
New World, and the
tristan moorhen G. nesiotis and
gough moorhen G. comeri of the
Tristan da Cunha archipelago, formerly often regarded as conspecific, are now treated as a separate species by all the ornithological authorities, following the discovery of significant genetic differences in addition to differences in the structure of the red bill shield and vocal differences. The final species in the genus, the
dusky moorhen G. tenebrosa of
Australasia, has also been considered conspecific by some authors in the past. The name
mor-hen has been recorded in
English since the 13th century. The word
moor here is in its old sense meaning
marsh; the species is not usually found in what is now called
moorland. Another old name, waterhen, is more descriptive of the bird's
habitat. A "watercock" is not a male "waterhen" but the rail species
Gallicrex cinerea, not closely related to the common moorhen. "Water rail" usually refers to
Rallus aquaticus, again not closely related. Five
subspecies are currently accepted: •
G. c. chloropus (
Linnaeus, 1758) – Europe and north Africa to Japan and southeast Asia •
G. c. meridionalis (
Brehm, CL, 1831) – Africa south of the Sahara and
Saint Helena (tropical southeast Atlantic Ocean) •
G. c. pyrrhorrhoa Newton, A, 1861 –
Comoros,
Madagascar,
Réunion and
Mauritius (west, central
Mascarene Islands) •
G. c. orientalis Horsfield, 1821 –
Inner Islands (northeast Seychelles), Andamans,
Malay Peninsula, Greater and
Lesser Sunda Islands,
Sulawesi region and Philippines •
G. c. guami Hartert, EJO, 1917 – north
Mariana Islands and
Guam (west
Micronesia) ==Description==