The gerenuk was first
described by
Victor Brooke in 1879 on the basis of three male
specimens procured on "the mainland of Africa, north of the island of Zanzibar". The
type locality was later corrected by
John Kirk, who originally obtained the specimens on the "coast near the
River Juba in southern
Somalia" before giving them to Waller. In 1886,
Franz Friedrich Kohl proposed a new genus for the gerenuk,
Litocranius. The common name derives from the
Somali name for the animal (); the first recorded use of the name dates back to 1895. It is also known as the "giraffe gazelle" due to its similarity to the
giraffe. Two
subspecies have been proposed, but these are considered to be independent species by some authors. •
L. w. sclateri (Northern gerenuk or Sclater's gazelle)
Neumann, 1899: Its range extends from northwestern Somalia (
Berbera District) westward to touch the Ethiopian border and Djibouti. •
L. w. walleri (Southern gerenuk or Waller's gazelle) (Brooke, 1879): Its range extends through northeastern Tanzania through Kenya to
Galcaio (Somalia). The range lies north of the
Shebelle River and near Juba River. In 1997
Colin Groves proposed that
Litocranius is a sister
taxon of the similarly long-necked
dibatag (
Ammodorcas clarkei), but withdrew from this in 2000. In 2013, Eva Verena Bärmann and colleagues (of the
University of Cambridge) revised the phylogeny of tribe on the basis of
nuclear and
mitochondrial gene analysis. The
cladogram prepared by them (given below) showed that the
springbok (
Antidorcas marsupialis) forms a
clade with the gerenuk; this clade is sister to the
saiga (
Saiga tatarica, tribe
Saigini) and the genera
Antilope (
blackbuck),
Eudorcas,
Gazella and
Nanger (of Antilopini). }} == Description ==