The first
formal description of the black-faced grassquit was by the Swedish naturalist
Carl Linnaeus in 1766 in the
twelfth edition of his
Systema Naturae. He introduced the
binomial name Fringilla bicolor. Linnaeus based his description on the "Bahama Sparrow" that was described and illustrated by
Mark Catesby in his
The Natural History of Carolina, Florida and the Bahama Islands which was published between 1729 and 1732. The black-faced grassquit was traditionally placed in the genus
Tiaris. A
molecular phylogenetic study published in 2014 found that this genus was
polyphyletic and that the black-faced grassquit was closely related to the
Saint Lucia black finch in the
monospecific genus
Melanospiza. In the resulting reorganization of the genera, the black-faced grassquit was moved to
Melanospiza. Eight
subspecies are recognised: •
M. b. bicolor (Linnaeus, 1766) – Bahamas and islands off north Cuba •
M. b. marchii (
Baird, SF, 1864) – Jamaica and Hispaniola •
M. b. omissa (
Jardine, 1847) – Puerto Rico, Lesser Antilles, north Colombia and north Venezuela •
M. b. huilae (
Miller, AH, 1952) – central Colombia •
M. b. grandior (
Cory, 1887) –
San Andrés Archipelago (east of Nicaragua) •
M. b. johnstonei (
Lowe, 1906) –
La Blanquilla Island and the
Los Hermanos Archipelago (off north Venezuela) •
M. b. sharpei (
Hartert, 1893) – Netherlands Antilles •
M. b. tortugensis (Cory, 1909) –
La Tortuga Island (off north Venezuela) ==Description==