The jungle babbler was described by the French zoologist
Charles Dumont de Sainte Croix in 1823, based on specimens from
Bengal. He coined the
binomial name Cossyphus striatus. This babbler was formerly placed in the
genus Turdoides but following the publication of a comprehensive
molecular phylogenetic study in 2018, it was moved to the resurrected genus
Argya. There are several named geographically isolated subspecies that show plumage shade differences. Former race
rufescens of Sri Lanka is considered a full species. The widely accepted subspecies include: •
A. s. striata (Dumont de Sainte Croix, 1823) which is found over much of northern India south of the Himalayan foothills extending to
Himachal Pradesh,
Uttar Pradesh,
Bhutan,
Assam,
Odisha and northeastern
Andhra Pradesh. The form found in parts of Odisha,
orissae, is said to be more rufous above and is usually subsumed into this. •
A. s. sindiana (Ticehurst, 1920) is a paler desert form that is found in the
Indus River plains of
Pakistan and extends into
Rajasthan and the
Rann of Kutch in India. •
A. s. somervillei (Sykes, 1832) is found in the northern
Western Ghats. •
A. s. malabarica (Jerdon, 1845) is found in the southern Western Ghats. •
A. s. orientalis (Jerdon, 1845) is found in peninsular India east of the Western Ghats. Some older literature can be confusing due to some incorrect usage, such as with Whistler (1944,
Spolia Zeylanica, 23:131), who used the name
affinis which is a completely different species,
Turdoides affinis, restricted to peninsular India. Although the two can sometimes be confused in poor lighting conditions, their calls are entirely different. ==Description==