Cervus
Cervus is a genus of deer that primarily are native to Eurasia, although one species occurs in northern Africa and another in North America. In addition to the species presently placed in this genus, it has included a whole range of other species now commonly placed in other genera. Additionally, the species-level taxonomy is in a state of flux.
Taxonomy
Genus
Until the 1970s, Cervus also included the members of the genera Axis, Dama, and Elaphurus, and until the late 1980s, it included members of Rucervus and Rusa.Species
In the third edition of Mammal Species of the World from 2005, only the red deer and sika deer were recognized as species in the genus Cervus. Genetic and morphological evidence suggest more species should be recognized. For example, the species Cervus canadensis is considered a separate species.Red deer species group
Within the red deer species group, some sources have recommended the Central Asian red deer should be treated as a species. If the Central Asian red deer is recognized as a species, it includes the Yarkand deer and Bactrian deer, but it could possibly also include the Kashmir stag, which has not been sampled in recent studies. If it is included in the Central Asian red deer, the scientific name of that species is C. hanglu. If it is not included, the scientific name of that species is C. yarkandensis, and the Kashmir stag may represent a separate monotypic species. The Central Asian red deer was considered its own species by the IUCN in 2017, and by the American Society of Mammalogists in 2021.Others members of the red deer group, which may represent separate species, are C. corsicanus, C. wallichi and C. xanthopygus. If so, C. corsicanus includes the subspecies C. c. barbarus, and is restricted to Maghreb in North Africa, Corsica and Sardinia. C. wallichi would probably include the subspecies C. w. kansuensis and C. w. macneilli, and would be found from Tibet to central China. C. xanthopygus would probably include the subspecies C. x. alashanicus, and would be found from the Russian Far East to northeastern China. This would restrict the "true" red deer to Europe, Anatolia, the Caucasus and northwestern Iran, and the elk/wapiti to North America and the Asian regions of the Tian Shan, Altai, and Great Khingan. Alternatively, the barbarus group species are subspecies of the "true" red deer, while the C. wallichii and C. xanthopygus groups are subspecies of the elk/wapiti.
Sika deer species group
It has been proposed that the sika deer should be split into four species based on genetics, morphology and voice, although this may be premature based on the presently available evidence. If split, the potential species are C. yesoensis from northern and central Japan, C. nippon of southern Japan, C. hortulorum of mainland Asia, and C. taiouanus of Taiwan.Phylogeny
A 2014 mitochondrial DNA study showed the internal phylogeny of Cervus to be as follows:Fossil species
The oldest member of the genus Cervus is Cervus magnus, known from the early-mid Pliocene of China. Other species include:- †Cervus astylodon – Ryukyu dwarf deer
- †Cervus grayi
- †''Cervus sivalensis''