Klipspringer
The Klipspringer (
Oreotragus oreotragus) is a unique antelope that is confined to rocky outcrops and mountain areas throughout Southern and Eastern Africa, with a relict population in Nigeria and the CAR. Due to its habitat requirements it has a rather patchy distribution and up to 11 subspecies have generally been recognized, though their validity has been questioned:
O. o. oreotragus Cape region and E Free State, South Africa
O. o. transvaalensis N and E South Africa
O. o. tyleri Namibia and SW Angola
O. o. stevensoni Zimbabwe and E Botswana
O. o. aceratos SE Africa between the Rufiji and Zambezi rivers
O. o. centralis Zambia, DR Congo, SW Tanzania, NW Malawi
O. o. schillingsi most of Tanzania, S Kenya, SW Uganda
O. o. aureus N Kenya, NE Uganda, S Ethiopia
O. o. saltatraxoides Ethiopian highlands, Eritrea, E Sudan
O. o. somalicus N Somalia and Djibouti
O. o. porteousi Nigeria and Central African Republic
All these subspecies are elevated to species level by G&G but the species range listed is much smaller for most taxa in Ungulate Taxonomy, correct distributions are given by Castello
, but the wrong distributions are given in HMW, implying clear boundaries between the taxa and thus ignoring areas where Klipspringer do occur (e.g. Northern Ethiopian highlands, most of Namibia etc.).
Sample sizes
No sample sizes are given for skins, for skulls and horns the following sample sizes are given (note that only in
schillingsi females generally have horns)
Skulls and horns (males/females)
porteousi 2-4 / 0
Sudan 1 / 2
somalicus 0 / 3
saltatrixoides 7-8 / 3
Ankole 2 / 3
NW Kenya 4-5 / 1
aureus 7 / 7
Kenyan highlands 4-19 / 1
schillingsi 4-6 / 3-4
aceratos 1 / 3
centralis 16 / 7
W Zambia 1 / 1
stevensoni 4-5 / 1
tyleri 8-11 / 8-9
transvaalensis 3 / 2
oreotragus 2-3 / 3-4
Note that Kenyan highlands, NW Kenya and Ankole are lumped with
aureus, Sudan is lumped with
saltatraxoides and W Zambia is lumped with
centralis
Overall sample sizes are small to very small for most taxa. Only
centralis, aureus and
tyleri are moderately to well represented.
Skins
oreotragus is described as uniform yellow with a pale underside. Neighbouring
tyleri is pale sandy-ochre, with underparts broadly uniformly white.
transvaalensis is relatively similar but more brightly yellow and with whiter underparts than
oreotragus.
stevensoni is duller in colour than
transvaalensis and darker, especially the head.
centralis rufous to yellow-gray and lacks the black/dark present above the forehoofs which is present in the southern taxa.
aceratos has ochery forequarters and olive hindquarters.
massaicus and
saltatraxoides are very similar with a golden orange color.
aureus is more golden-yellow and has a rufous crown.
somalicus is yellowy-olive with a brown crown and white underparts.
porteousi is variable in colour but more dull yellowy. For
porteousi, saltatrixoides and
schillingsi the variation within each taxa is more variable than between the taxa.
Horns and skulls
schillingsi is the only taxa in which the females also have horns. Many other differences are also described by G&G between the taxa, but these differences are a) based on very small sample sizes , b) only hold up when comparing averages, without taking into account the range of values within each taxa and c) taxa with high number of samples show a large variation. It thus seems reasonable to assume that if more samples become available for other taxa, their range in measurements will also increase. There are a few things that become apparent though: the females in
oreotragus are relatively small, especially when compared to the size of
oreotragus males.
transvaalensis have relatively large horns and the animals from Sudan are very small (but only 3 samples available). for
schillingsi females not only have horns, but they are also larger. G&G further describe a lot of differences in size and teeth size, but the conclusions they draw, cannot possibly be drawn from the available data.
Additional data
Robinson et al. (1995) describe that there is no difference in cytotype between different Southern African taxa (probably
oreotragus and
transvaalensis), but they also note that this doesn't mean there is no genetic difference between the taxa. For her MSc thesis Le Roex sampled DNA of 9 of the 11 taxa (missing only
porteousi and
stevensoni). She showed a split between southern and eastern populations and a split within the Southern populations. The Southern versus Eastern divergence is as high as 11%, comparable with e.g. Grant's gazelle (which have now been split) and Kob (not split). The two Southern groups differ about 6%. Most subspecies could also be recognized based on their dna, only
transvaalensis and
aceratos were not distinguishable, so could be merged.
Summarizing
Based on the work by G&G there is no compelling reason to split Klipspringers, their conclusions are drawn from a very small sample size. The work by Le Roex is however very interesting and raises the possibility that there are at least two Klipspringer species, one in Southern Africa and the other in Eastern Africa. The position of the Nigerian and Central African Populations remains an enigma though. Le Roex's work was however based on small sample sizes for many subspecies, so additional work is necessary to see whether the subspecific differences would be justified in all cases. It is also of high conservation importance to include
porteousi in that analysis, as it is the most threatened taxa and possibly a separate species. The evidence seems strong enough to recognize two Klipspringer species within this species group (with the possibility of a third in Nigeria). So then we would provisionally get:
Oreotragus (o.) oreotragus (Zimmermann 1783) with the following subspecies:
oreotragus
stevensoni
centralis
tyleri
aceratos
Oreotragus (o.) saltatrixoides (Temminck. 1853) with the following subspecies
saltatrixoides
schillingsi
somalicus
aureus
porteousi
Oreotragus oreotragus oreotragus
@Gondwana , Western Cape, South Africa
Oreotragus oreotragus aceratos (formerly
transvaalensis)
@LaughingDove , Entabeni Game Reserve, South Africa
Oreotragus saltatrixoides saltatrixoides
@MagpieGoose , Biopark Valencia, Spain
@Javan Rhino , Zoo Frankfurt, Germany
Oreotragus saltatrixoided schillingsii
@Hix , Tarangire NP, Tanzania
References
Le Roex (2008)
http://open.uct.ac.za/bitstream/handle/11427/19029/thesis_sci_2008_le_roex_nikki.pdf?sequence=1
Robinson et al. (1995)
http://www.zobodat.at/pdf/Zeitschrift-Saeugetierkunde_61_0049-0053.pdf
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