The species was
described by the English zoologist
Thomas Jerdon in 1839 under the
binomial name Crateroptus cachinnans. In 1872 he noted that the form
Trochalopteron jerdoni that he had discovered on the peak of
Banasura ["Banasore"] in Wayanad would likely also occur in Coorg. He added that they were separated by lower hills despite being only about 50 to 60 miles from the western edge of the Nilgiris. The species
jerdoni included
fairbanki and
meridionale (both from south of the Palghat Gap) while
cachinnans was kept separate. This treatment of
jerdoni and
cachinnans as species continued until 2005 when Rasmussen and Anderton grouped the black-chinned forms north of the Palghat Gap into one species with
jerdoni of Coorg-Wynaad treated as a subspecies of
cachinnans. The wider distribution of the taxon made the older name of "Nilgiri laughing-thrush" inappropriate. The form south of the Palghat gap without a black chin was elevated to a full species,
fairbanki with
meridionale as a subspecies, and called the
Kerala laughingthrush.
Stuart Baker in the second edition of the
Fauna of British India included a subspecies
cinnamomeum described by
William Ruxton Davison from two specimens obtained by Atholl Macgregor, British Resident in Travancore, from an unknown location. This is usually not recognized but the description was based on two specimens with the black of the chin and lores replaced by dark brown. Stuart Baker used several genera for the south Indian laughingthrushes.
Trochalopteron was said to have the nostril visible and not covered by overhanging bristles as in
Ianthocincla, the genus in which the
Wayanad laughingthrush was placed. Subsequent revision by Ripley and Ali lumped all the south Indian laughingthrushes into the single genus
Garrulax. The genus splits were, however, reinstated on the basis of differences in structure and the species was included in a previously erected genus
Trochalopteron. A detailed phylogenetic study published in 2017 identified that the south Indian species that were included in
Trochalopteron were best treated as a sister group of a clade that included
Leiothrix,
Minla,
Heterophasia and
Actinodura and they were not closely related to members of
Trochalopteron in the strict sense. This led to a need to establish a new genus
Montecincla (with the type species being the first described species,
Montecincla cachinnans). ==Description==