The roan antelope shares the
genus Hippotragus with the
extinct bluebuck (
H. leucophaeus) and the
sable antelope (
H. niger), and is a member of the
family Bovidae. It was first
described by French naturalist
Étienne Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire in 1803. The
specific epithet equinus derives from the
Latin ("horse-like"), referring to the horse-like appearance of this antelope. In 1996, an analysis of
mitochondrial DNA extracted from a mounted specimen of the bluebuck found that it was outside the
clade containing the roan and sable antelopes. The study therefore concluded that the bluebuck is a distinct species, and not merely a
subspecies of the roan antelope. The
cladogram below shows the position of the roan antelope among its relatives, following the 1996 analysis: }} In 1974, palaeoanthropologist
Richard Klein studied the fossils of
Hippotragus species in South Africa. Most of these were found to represent the bluebuck and the roan antelope. The roan antelope seems to have appeared in the
Nelson Bay Cave region following climatic changes in the
Holocene.
Subspecies Six
subspecies are recognised: •
H. e. bakeri (Heuglin, 1863): Occurs in
Sudan (
East Africa). •
H. e. cottoni Dollman and Burlace, 1928: Occurs in
Angola,
Botswana, the southern
Democratic Republic of the Congo, central and northern
Malawi, and
Zambia (
Southern Africa). •
H. e. equinus É. Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, 1803: Occurs in
Mozambique,
South Africa and
Zimbabwe (Southern Africa). •
H. e. koba (
Gray, 1872): Range extends from
Senegal to
Benin (
West Africa). •
H. e. langheldi Matschie, 1898: Occurs in
Burundi, the northern Democratic Republic of the Congo,
Ethiopia,
Kenya,
Rwanda,
South Sudan,
Tanzania and
Uganda (East Africa). •
H. e. scharicus (Schwarz, 1913): Occurs in
Cameroon, the
Central African Republic,
Chad and eastern
Nigeria (
Central Africa). The 6 subspecies were described in 1971 on the basis of morphology instead of genetics. As a result, the validity of the subspecies have been questioned by scientists. Since then, there have been attempts to determine their validity through genetic analysis, but these have been insufficient at resolving the uncertainty. File:Roan antelope (Hippotragus equinus) male walking.jpg|
H. e. equinus,
South Africa File:Roan Antelope, Kafue National Park, Zambia, Nov 2011.jpg|
H. e. cottoni,
Zambia File:Roan antelope (Hippotragus equinus koba) showing ears.jpg|
H. e. koba showing both sides of ears,
Senegal == Description ==