In May 2011, Tao Deng and a team of researchers from the Chinese
Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology (IVPP),
Northwest University's Department of Geology, and the
University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, conducted fieldwork in the Dalanggou quarry in Maijiaxiang Township of
Guanghe County, China. Several geologic formations of the
Linxia Basin have outcrops at this locality and preserve mammal fossils, including (from oldest to youngest) the
Shangzhuang,
Dongxiang,
Hujialiang, and
Liushu formations. The research team collected fossil material of a crown-antlered deer-like animal from the Dongxiang Formation. The material they collected included a right antler, three
cheek teeth, and two
tarsal bones (an
astragalus and
calcaneum), all of which are permanently
accessioned at the IVPP. In 2014, Deng and colleagues
described these remains as belonging to a new species of the genus
Stephanocemas, a deer-like mammal in the clade
Lagomerycidae which has a broad East, Central, and Southeast Asian distribution. They named it
Stephanocemas guangheensis, with the
specific name referencing the discovery of the fossils in Guanghe County. The researchers established the isolated antler (specimen IVPP V 18584) as the
holotype (name-bearing) specimen. They further referred the remaining material (IVPP V 18585.1–5) to this species, while noting they appeared to belong to an individual much larger than that which produced the holotype. In February 2026, Jiao Fu and colleagues described additional lagomerycid material recovered from the Citan locality of the Dongxiang Formation, which is about away from Dalanggou and represents the same fossiliferous horizons. Previously, only bones of the
proboscidean
Platybelodon tongxinensis had been reported from this site. These discoveries included IVPP V 31500, a much more complete portion of the skull, including the dorsal part of the
braincase and both complete antlers, and IVPP V 33252, the middle part of the right mandible with three preserved teeth (p4–m2). The researchers identified these new specimens as belonging to
guangheensis based on the small size and nearly indistinguishable morphology of the antlers in both specimens. However, they also identified characteristics distinguishing this species from members of any other lagomerycid genus, including
Stephanocemas. As such, they named the new genus
Loxomeryx for
guangheensis, creating the new combination
Loxomeryx guangheensis. The
generic name combines the
Greek words , meaning or , and , referring to
ruminant mammals, referencing the bases of the taxon's antler's, which are inclined
posteriorly. Fu and colleagues (2026) noted that the teeth and tarsal bones described by Deng et al. (2014) and referred to
guangheensis should not be regarded as belonging to this species due to their significantly larger size. Furthermore, they mentioned that additional antlers consistent in size with the teeth and tarsals had been found in the Citan locality, distinct from
Loxomeryx but reminiscent of
Stephanocemas. As such, they likely belong to the latter genus rather than the former. == Description ==