Taxonomy

Nilgiri Tahr Mother and Kid

 

Nilgiritragus hylocrius [Ropiquet & Hassanin, 2005]. 

 

Formerly   Hemitragus hylocrius [Ogilby, 1838].

Citation: Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1837:81 [1838]

Type locality: India, Nilgiri Hills.

 

Kingdom: Animalia Linnaeus, 1758 - animals

Subkingdom: Bilateria (Hatschek, 1888) Cavalier-Smith, 1983 - bilaterians, triploblastic animals

Branch: Deuterostomia Grobben, 1908 - deuterostomes

Infrakingdom: Chordonia (Haeckel, 1874) Cavalier-Smith, 1998

Phylum: Chordata Bateson, 1885 - chordates

Infraphylum: Gnathostomata auct. - jawed vertebrates

Superclass: Tetrapoda Goodrich, 1930 - tetrapods

Class: Mammalia Linnaeus, 1758 - mammals

Subclass: Theriiformes (Rowe, 1988:245) McKenna & Bell, 1997:vii,36

Infraclass: Holotheria (Wible et al., 1995) McKenna & Bell, 1997:vii,

Superorder: Preptotheria (McKenna, 1975:41) McKenna in Stucky & McKenna

Order: Ungulata (un-goo-LAH-tuh) (Linnaeus, 1766) McKenna, 1975:41

Suborder: Ruminantia Scopoli, 1777:493-496

Superfamily: Bovoidea (Gray, 1821:308) Simpson, 1931:264, 284

Family: Bovidae

Subfamily: Caprinae

Tribe: Caprini

Genus: Nilgiritragus ( Ropiquet & Hassanin, 2005)

Species: hylocrius (Ogilby, 1838)

Scientific Name: Nilgiritragus  hylocrius (Ropiquet & Hassanin, 2005)

It was after Ropiquet and Hassanin(2005) carried out phylogenetic analyses and proposed a new taxonomy that the genus name was changed to Nilgiritragus from hemitragus. The analyses were carried out on a matrix including most extant species currently described in the tribe Caprini sensu lato, and 3165 nucleotide characters, coming from four different markers, i.e., an intron of the nuclear gene coding for the protein kinase C iota, and three mitochondrial genes (subunit II of the cytochrome c oxidase, cytochrome b, and 12S rRNA). The results show that the genus Hemitragus is polyphyletic, as H. jemlahicus is associated with Capra (goats), H. hylocrius is the sister-group of Ovis (sheep), and H. jayakari is allied with Ammotragus lervia (aoudad). In the light of these unexpected results, Ropiquet and Hassanin revaluated the validity of the morphological characters originally used for defining the genus Hemitragus. They have  proposed a new taxonomy, where the three species of tahr are ranged into three monospecific genera: the genus Hemitragus is restricted to the Himalayan tahr, and two new genera are created: Arabitragus for the Arabian tahr and Nilgiritragus for the Nilgiri tahr.