The Eurasian scops owl was
formally described by Swedish naturalist
Carl Linnaeus in 1758 in the
tenth edition of his
Systema Naturae. Linnaeus cited the 1599 description by the Italian naturalist
Ulisse Aldrovandi, placed it with all the other owls in the
genus Strix and coined the
binomial name Strix scops. The Eurasian scops owl is now placed in the genus
Otus that was introduced in 1769 by Welsh naturalist
Thomas Pennant. The genus name is derived from the
Latin ''
meaning "eared owl". The specific epithet scops
is from the Ancient Greek word skōps
for a little eared owl. The term is believed to be of Pre-Greek origin; folk etymology links it to σκώπτω (skṓptō
, "to mock") or σκέπτομαι (sképtomai'', "to examine"). Five
subspecies are recognised: •
O. s. scops (
Linnaeus, 1758) – France and Italy to the Caucasus area •
O. s. mallorcae von Jordans, 1923 – Iberian Peninsula, Balearic Islands and northwest Africa •
O. s. cycladum (
Tschusi, 1904) – southern Greece and Crete to southern Turkey, Syria and Jordan •
O. s. turanicus (
Loudon, 1905) – Iraq to northwest Pakistan •
O. s. pulchellus (
Pallas, 1771) – Kazakhstan to southern Siberia and western Himalayas == Description ==