The western whipbird was
formally described in 1844 by the English ornithologist
John Gould based on a specimen collected by
John Gilbert in the
Wongan Hills of
Western Australia. Gould coined the current
binomial name Psophodes nigrogularis. The specific epithet combines the
Latin niger meaning "black" with
Modern Latin gularis meaning "throated". Four
subspecies are recognised: •
P. n. nigrogularis Gould, 1844 –
Two Peoples Bay, far southwest
South Australia: (Endangered) The western heath subspecies is now restricted to a small patch east of
Albany, having disappeared from large parts of its range due to land clearance. •
P. n. oberon Schodde &
Mason, IJ, 1991 – southwest
Western Australia, east of Two Peoples Bay: (Rare) The western mallee subspecies is found in scattered populations between the Stirling Ranges and Ravensthorpe. It is apparently common in the
Fitzgerald River National Park. •
P. n. leucogaster Howe & Ross, JA, 1933 – coastal central south South Australia (white-bellied whipbird group) •
P. n. lashmari Schodde & Mason, IJ, 1991 –
Kangaroo Island (off southeast South Australia) (white-bellied whipbird group) The subspecies
P. n. leucogaster and
P. n. lashmari have been considered as a separate species, the white-bellied whipbird. ==Description==