In 1760 the French zoologist
Mathurin Jacques Brisson included a description of the white-rumped munia in his
Ornithologie based on a specimen that he believed had been collected from the Isle de Bourbon (
Réunion). The specimen is now assumed to have come from
Sri Lanka. He used the French name ''Le gros-bec de l'Isle de Bourbon
and the Latin Coccothraustes Borbonica
. Although Brisson coined Latin names, these do not conform to the binomial system and are not recognised by the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature. When in 1766 the Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus updated his Systema Naturae for the twelfth edition, he added 240 species that had been previously described by Brisson. The specific name striata
is Latin for "striated ". This species is now placed in the genus Lonchura'' that was introduced by the English naturalist
William Henry Sykes in 1832. There are six
subspecies: •
L. s. acuticauda (
Hodgson, 1836) – northern Indian mainland below c. 1,500 metres
ASL, north through the
Himalayas foothills of
Bhutan and
Nepal to the
Dehradun region of
Uttarakhand, India across to Bangladesh to northern Indochina :Medium brown above, except on the face and
remiges,
buffy below •
L. s. striata (Linnaeus, 1766) – southern Indian mainland, Sri Lanka :Dark chocolate-brown above, white below •
L. s. fumigata (
Walden, 1873) –
Andaman Islands •
L. s. semistriata (
Hume, 1874) –
Car Nicobar and Central (
Nancowry) group,
Nicobar Islands •
L. s. subsquamicollis (
Baker, ECS, 1925) – Malay Peninsula to southern Indochina •
L. s. swinhoei (
Cabanis, 1882) – east central and east China, Taiwan A domesticated hybrid called the
society finch, sometimes called
Lonchura domestica is said by some sources to have
L. s. striata in its ancestry, although other theories suggest contributions from the
white-throated munia. The hybrid with numerous variants in plumage are thought to have been established by aviculturists in
Japan. ==Description==