The
scientific name of the klipspringer is
Oreotragus oreotragus , from Greek ὄρος (
óros), "mountain", and τράγος (
trágos), "he-goat". It is the sole member of the
genus Oreotragus and subfamily
Oreotraginae or tribe
Oreotragini, and is classified under the
family Bovidae. The
species was first
described by German zoologist
Eberhard August Wilhelm von Zimmermann in 1783, who gave it the scientific name
Antilope oreotragus, and it was only given its own separate genus in 1834. The vernacular name "klipspringer" is a
compound of the
Afrikaans words
klip ("rock") and
springer ("leaper"). Another name for this
antelope is "klipbok". In 1934, South African paleontologist
Robert Broom studied a fossilized right maxillary bone from the cave deposits of
Taung, South Africa, and believed they represent an extinct genus and species that lived during the
Pliocene or
Pleistocene epochs, which he assigned the name
Palaeotragiscus longiceps. Later in 1952, another South African paleontologist, Lawrence H. Wells, described an antelope skull found five years earlier in
Swartkrans, and believed it represented a prehistoric species related to the klipspringer. He named this species
Oreotragus major, believing it was distinguished from the modern klipspringer by its larger size. However, both
Palaeotragiscus longiceps and
Oreotragus major were later determined not to differ from the modern klipspringer in any significant aspects, so they are now considered to be
junior synonyms of
Oreotragus oreotragus. A 2012
phylogenetic study showed that the klipspringer is closely related to
Kirk's dik-dik (
Madoqua kirkii) and the
suni (
Neotragus moschatus). The klipspringer evolved nearly 14 million years ago. The
cladogram below is based on this study. }} As many as 11
subspecies have been identified, though zoologists
Colin Groves and
Peter Grubb treat a few of them as independent species in a 2011 publication: •
O. o. aceratos Noack, 1899 : Noack's or southern Tanzanian klipspringer. Occurs in eastern and southern Africa, between rivers
Rufiji and
Zambezi. •
O. o. aureus Heller, 1913 : Golden klipspringer. Occurs in
Kenya. •
O. o. centralis Hinton, 1921 : Zambian klipspringer. Occurs in central and southern Africa. •
O. o. oreotragus (Zimmermann, 1783) : Cape klipspringer. Occurs in the
Cape of Good Hope,
South Africa. •
O. o. porteousi Lydekker, 1911 : Occurs in central Africa. •
O. o. saltatrixoides (
Temminck, 1853) : Ethiopian klipspringer. Occurs in the highlands of
Ethiopia. •
O. o. schillingsi Neumann, 1902 : Maasai klipspringer. Occurs in eastern Africa. •
O. o. somalicus Neumann, 1902 : Somali klipspringer. Occurs in northern
Somalia. •
O. o. stevensoni Roberts, 1946 : Stevenson's klipspringer. Occurs in western
Zimbabwe. •
O. o. transvaalensis Roberts, 1917 : Transvaal klipspringer. Occurs in South African highlands and
Drakensberg. •
O. o. tyleri Hinton, 1921 : Angolan klipspringer. Occurs in
Namibia. ==Description==