In 1758 the Swedish naturalist
Carl Linnaeus included the twite in the
10th edition of his
Systema Naturae under the
binomial name Fringilla flavirostris. The twite and the closely related
linnets were at one time placed in the genus
Carduelis but were moved to the resurrected genus
Linaria based on a
phylogenetic analysis of
mitochondrial and nuclear DNA sequences that was published in 2012. The genus had originally been described in 1802 by the German naturalist
Johann Matthäus Bechstein. The genus name
linaria is the
Latin for a linen-weaver, from
linum, "
flax". The specific epithet
flavirostris means "yellow-billed". Nine
subspecies are recognised: •
L. f. pipilans (
Latham, 1787) – north Ireland and north Britain (
syn. L. f. bensonorum) •
L. f. flavirostris (
Linnaeus, 1758) – north Scandinavia and northwest Russia •
L. f. brevirostris (
Bonaparte, 1855) – Turkey, the
Caucasus and north Iran •
L. f. kirghizorum (
Sushkin, 1925) – north, central
Kazakhstan •
L. f. korejevi (
Zarudny & Härms, 1914) – northeast
Kazakhstan to northwest China •
L. f. altaica (Sushkin, 1925) – southwest Siberia and north, west Mongolia •
L. f. montanella (
Hume, 1873) –
Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, north Afghanistan and northwest Pakistan to northwest China (syn.
L. f. pamirensis) •
L. f. miniakensis (Jacobi, A, 1923) – east Tibet and west China •
L. f. rufostrigata (Walton, 1905) – west, south Tibet, north India and north Nepal ==Description==