The variegated fairywren was originally described by
Nicholas Aylward Vigors and
Thomas Horsfield in 1827, and was at first considered a colour variant of the
superb fairywren. It is one of eleven species of the genus
Malurus, commonly known as fairywrens, found in Australia and lowland
New Guinea. Within the genus it belongs to a group of four very similar species known collectively as chestnut-shouldered fairywrens. There are well-defined borders between the variegated fairywren and the other chestnut-shouldered wrens in the group, which are the
lovely fairywren,
red-winged fairywren, and the
blue-breasted fairywren. Gregory Mathews erected the genus
Leggeornis for the group, with the variegated fairywren as the type species. However, the genus has been reclassified as a subgenus within
Malurus. Like other
fairywrens, the variegated fairywren is unrelated to the true
wrens. Initially, fairywrens were thought to be a member of the
Old World flycatcher family, Muscicapidae, or the warbler family,
Sylviidae, before being placed in the newly recognised
Maluridae in 1975. More recently,
DNA analysis has shown the family to be related to the
honeyeaters (Meliphagidae) and the
pardalotes (Pardalotidae) in a large superfamily
Meliphagoidea. "Variegated fairywren" has been designated the official name by the
International Ornithologists' Union (IOC). The scientific name commemorates the British collector
Aylmer Bourke Lambert. The variegated fairywren was formerly known as the variegated wren, until 1978 when the RAOU pushed for the current name to be used. It is also known as Lambert's wren.
Evolutionary history In his 1982 monograph, ornithologist
Richard Schodde proposed a northern origin for the chestnut-shouldered fairywren group due to the variety of forms in north and their absence in the southeast of the continent. Ancestral birds spread south and colonised the southwest during a warm wetter period around 2 million years ago at the end of the
Pliocene or beginning of the
Pleistocene. Subsequent cooler and drier conditions resulted in loss of habitat and fragmentation of populations. Southwestern birds gave rise to what is now the red-winged fairywren, while those in the northwest of the continent became the variegated fairywren and yet another isolated in the northeast became the lovely fairywren. Further warmer, humid conditions again allowed birds to spread southwards, this group occupying central southern Australia east to the
Eyre Peninsula became the blue-breasted fairywren. Cooler climate after this resulted in this being isolated as well and evolving into a separate species. Finally, after the end of the
last glacial period 12,000–13,000 years ago, the northern variegated forms have again spread southwards, resulting in the
purple-backed fairywren. This has resulted in the variegated fairywren's range to overlap with all three other species. Schodde also proposed that the blue-grey coloured females of the lavender-flanked subspecies were ancestral, while the browner coloration of females of southern forms was an adaptation to dry climates. Further molecular studies may result in this hypothesis being modified. A 2017 molecular analysis by Alison J. McLean and colleagues of the former subspecies of the variegated fairywren largely supported Schodde's hypothesis. The
Great Dividing Range was a major barrier and there is a deep genetic split between the variegated fairywren to its east, and the purple-backed fairywren to the west. In 2018, this split was recognized by the
International Ornithological Committee with the subspecies to the north and west reallocated to the purple-backed fairywren. == Description ==