Saigini


Saigini is a tribe of artiodactyl mammals of the Bovidae family, subfamily Antilopinae, comprising two species of medium-sized gazelles that inhabit the Eurasian steppes.

Taxonomy

Description

The tribe was created in 1945 by the American paleontologist and theoretical biologist George Gaylord Simpson.
According to the Simpson classification the tribe comprises two monospecific genera:
Saiga and Pantholops are problematic genera in taxonomy. Saiga was traditionally classified as a member of the tribe Saigini, within the subfamily Caprinae but some authors suggested that the genus Saiga was closer to the subfamily Antilopinae.
In 2000 Groves analyzed the morphological characters of Procapra, Prodorcas and Saiga, and proposed three basal groups of Antilopiae, one of which included a clade Saiga + Procapra.
The genus Panthalops is monotypic, and is sometimes included in the tribe Saigini on the basis of similar morphological features, most of which are plesiomorphic. However, molecular and morphological findings suggest that Pantholops hodgsonii should be classified more correctly in the subfamily Caprinae, but the status of the Tibetan gazelle in this subfamily remains uncertain. Data on cytochrome b and small portions of 12S and 16S ribosomal genes suggest phylogenetic affinities of Saiga and Procapra with Antilopinae. However, these studies do not clarify the close relationships within this clade. Given this uncertainty, some authors have suggested that the Saigini taxon should be abandoned.