The genus
Spinus was introduced in 1816 by the German naturalist
Carl Ludwig Koch with the
type species by
tautonomy as
Fringilla spinus Linnaeus, 1758, the
Eurasian siskin. The genus name is from the
Ancient Greek spínos, a name for a now-unidentifiable bird. All of the species in the genus, except for the
Tibetan serin, were formerly included in the genus
Carduelis. They were moved to the resurrected genus
Spinus based on
phylogenetic studies of
mitochondrial and nuclear DNA sequences. The Tibetan serin was formerly placed in the genus
Serinus. The
Eurasian siskin and the Tibetan serin are the only species from the Old World included in the group. The radiation of South American siskins was rapid, and was originally thought to have occurred around 3.5 million years ago due to a range expansion associated with the
Great American Interchange and contingent upon the spread of mesothermal plants from the Rocky Mountains to the Andes. The
hooded siskin may be
paraphyletic. == Ecology ==