Rabbit
Rabbit | |
---|---|
European rabbit(Oryctolagus cuniculus) | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Mammalia |
Order: | Lagomorpha |
Family: | Leporidae |
Included genera | |
Cladisticallyincluded but traditionally excluded taxa | |
Rabbitsare smallmammalsin thefamilyLeporidae(which also includes thehares), which is in theorderLagomorpha(which also includespikas). They are familiar throughout the world as a wild prey animal, a domesticated form of livestock, and a pet, having a widespread effect onecologiesand cultures. The most widespread rabbitgeneraareOryctolagusandSylvilagus.The former,Oryctolagus,includes theEuropean rabbit,Oryctolagus cuniculus,which is the ancestor of the hundreds ofbreedsofdomestic rabbitand has been introduced on every continent exceptAntarctica.The latter,Sylvilagus,includes over 13 wild rabbit species, among them thecottontailsandtapetis.Wild rabbits not included inOryctolagusandSylvilagusinclude several species of limiteddistribution,including thepygmy rabbit,volcano rabbit,andSumatran striped rabbit.
Rabbits are aparaphyleticgrouping, and do not constitute aclade,as hares (belonging to thegenusLepus) are nested within theLeporidaeclade and are not described as rabbits. Although once consideredrodents,lagomorphs diverged earlier and have a number of traits rodents lack, including two extraincisors.Similarities between rabbits and rodents were once attributed toconvergent evolution,but studies inmolecular biologyhave found acommon ancestorbetween lagomorphs and rodents and place them in the cladeGlires.
Rabbitphysiologyis suited to escaping predators and surviving in varioushabitats,living either alone or in groups in nests or burrows. As prey animals, rabbits are constantly aware of their surroundings, having a wide field of vision and ears with high surface area to detect potential predators. The ears of a rabbit are essential forthermoregulationand contain a high density ofblood vessels.The bone structure of a rabbit's hind legs, which is longer than that of the fore legs, allows for quick hopping, which is beneficial for escaping predators and can provide powerful kicks if captured. Rabbits are typicallynocturnaland often sleep with their eyes open. They reproduce quickly, having shortpregnancies,largelittersof four to twelve kits, and no particularmating season;however, the mortality rate of rabbit embryos is high, and there exist several widespread diseases that affect rabbits, such asrabbit hemorrhagic diseaseandmyxomatosis.In some regions, especiallyAustralia,rabbits have caused ecological problems and are regarded as a pest.
Humans have used rabbits as livestock since at least the first century BC inancient Rome,raising them for their meat, fur and wool. The various breeds of the European rabbit have been developed to suit each of these products; the practice of raising and breeding rabbits as livestock is known ascuniculture.Rabbits are seen in human culture globally, appearing as asymbolof fertility, cunning, and innocence inmajor religions,historical and contemporary art.
Terminology and etymology
The word rabbit derives from theMiddle Englishrabet( "young of the coney" ), a borrowing from theWalloonrobète,which was a diminutive of the French orMiddle Dutchrobbe( "rabbit" ), a term of unknown origin.[1]The termconeyis a term for an adult rabbit used until the 18th century;rabbitonce referred only to the young animals.[2]More recently, the termkitorkittenhas been used to refer to a young rabbit.[3][4]The endearing wordbunnyis attested by the 1680s as a diminutive ofbun,a term used in Scotland to refer to rabbits andsquirrels.[5]
Coneyis derived fromcuniculus,[2]aLatinterm referring to rabbits which has been in use from at least the first century BCE inHispania.The wordcuniculusmay originate from a diminutive form of the word for "dog"in theCeltic languages.[6]
A group of rabbits is known as acolony,[7]nest,orwarren,[8]though the latter term more commonly refers to where the rabbits live.[9]A group of baby rabbits produced from a single mating is referred to as alitter[10]and a group of domestic rabbits living together is sometimes called aherd.[8]
A male rabbit is called abuck,as are malegoatsanddeer,derived from theOld Englishbuccaorbucc,meaning "he-goat" or "male deer", respectively.[11]A female is called adoe,derived from the Old Englishdā,related todēon( "to suck" ).[12]
Taxonomy and evolution
Rabbits and hares were formerly classified in the orderRodentia(rodents) until 1912, when they were moved into the orderLagomorpha(which also includespikas). Since 1945, there has been support for the cladeGliresthat includes both rodents and lagomorphs,[13]though the two groups have always been closely associated in taxonomy; fossil,[14]DNA,[15]andretrotransposon[16]studies in the 2000s have solidified support for the clade. Studies inpaleontologyandmolecular biologysuggest that rodents and lagomorphsdivergedat the start of theTertiaryperiod.[17]
|
The extant species of family Leporidae, of which there are more than 70, are contained within 11genera,one of which isLepus,the hares. There are 32 extant species withinLepus.The cladogram is from Matthee et al., 2004, based on nuclear and mitochondrial gene analysis.[18]
Classification
- OrderLagomorpha
- GenusBrachylagus
- Pygmy rabbit,Brachylagus idahoensis
- GenusBunolagus
- Riverine rabbit,Bunolagus monticularis
- GenusCaprolagus
- Hispid hare,Caprolagus hispidus
- GenusLepus[a]
- GenusNesolagus
- Sumatran striped rabbit,Nesolagus netscheri
- Annamite striped rabbit,Nesolagus timminsi
- GenusOryctolagus
- European rabbit,Oryctolagus cuniculus
- GenusPentalagus
- Amami rabbit/Ryūkyū rabbit,Pentalagus furnessi
- GenusPoelagus
- Bunyoro rabbit,Poelagus marjorita
- GenusPronolagus
- Natal red rock hare,Pronolagus crassicaudatus
- Jameson's red rock hare,Pronolagus randensis
- Smith's red rock hare,Pronolagus rupestris
- Hewitt's red rock hare,Pronolagus saundersiae
- GenusRomerolagus
- Volcano rabbit,Romerolagus diazi
- GenusSylvilagus
- Andean tapeti,Sylvilagus andinus
- Bogota tapeti,Sylvilagus apollinaris
- Swamp rabbit,Sylvilagus aquaticus
- Desert cottontail,Sylvilagus audubonii
- Brush rabbit,Sylvilagus bachmani
- Common tapeti,Sylvilagus brasiliensis
- Mexican cottontail,Sylvilagus cunicularis
- Ecuadorian tapeti,Sylvilagus daulensis
- Dice's cottontail,Sylvilagus dicei
- Eastern cottontail,Sylvilagus floridanus
- Fulvous tapeti,Sylvilagus fulvescens
- Central American tapeti,Sylvilagus gabbi
- Tres Marias cottontail,Sylvilagus graysoni
- Robust cottontail,Sylvilagus holzneri
- Northern tapeti,Sylvilagus incitatus
- Omilteme cottontail,Sylvilagus insonus
- Nicefor's tapeti,Sylvilagus nicefori
- Mountain cottontail,Sylvilagus nuttallii
- Appalachian cottontail,Sylvilagus obscurus
- Marsh rabbit,Sylvilagus palustris
- Suriname tapeti,Sylvilagus parentum
- Colombian tapeti,Sylvilagus salentus
- Santa Marta tapeti,Sylvilagus sanctaemartae
- Western tapeti,Sylvilagus surdaster
- Coastal tapeti,Sylvilagus tapetillus
- New England cottontail,Sylvilagus transitionalis
- Venezuelan lowland rabbit,Sylvilagus varynaensis
Differences from hares
The termrabbitis typically used for all Leporidae species, excluding the genusLepus.Members of that genus are known ashares[20]orjackrabbits.[21]
Lepusspecies areprecocial,born relatively mature and mobile with hair and good vision out in the open air, while rabbit species arealtricial,born hairless and blind in burrows and buried nests.[22]Hares are also generally larger than rabbits, and have longerpregnancies.[20]Hares and some rabbits live relatively solitary lives above the ground in open grassy areas,[23]interacting mainly during breeding season.[24][25]Some rabbit species group together to reduce their chance of being preyed upon,[26]and the European rabbit will form large social groups inburrows,[27]which are grouped together to formwarrens.[28][29]Burrowing by hares varies by location, and is more prominent in younger members of the genus;[24]many rabbit species that do not dig their own burrows will use the burrows of other animals.[30][31]
Rabbits and hares have historically not occupied the same locations, and only becamesympatricrelatively recently; historic accounts describe antagonistic relationships between rabbits and hares, specifically between theEuropean hareandEuropeanorcottontail rabbits,but scientific literature since 1956 has found no evidence of aggression or undue competition between rabbits and hares. When they appear in the same habitat, rabbits and hares can co-exist on similar diets.[32]Hares will notably force other hare species out of an area to control resources, but are not territorial.[33]When faced with predators, hares will escape by outrunning them, whereas rabbits, being smaller and less able to reach the high speeds of longer-legged hares, will try to seek cover.[26]
Descendants of theEuropean rabbitare commonly bred as livestock and kept as pets, whereas no hares have beendomesticated,though populations have been introduced to non-native habitats for use as a food source.[23]The breed known as theBelgian hareis actually adomestic rabbitwhich has been selectively bred to resemble a hare,[34]most likely fromFlemish Giantstock originally.[35]
Domestication
Rabbits, specifically the European rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus) species, have long been domesticated. The European rabbit has been widely kept as livestock, starting inancient Romefrom at least the first century BC.Selective breeding,which began in the Middle Ages, has generated awide variety of rabbit breeds,of which many (since the early 19th century) are also kept as pets.[36]Somestrainsof European rabbit have been bred specifically asresearch subjects,such as theNew Zealand white.[37]
As livestock, European rabbits are bred for their meat andfur.The earliest breeds were important sources of meat,[38][39]and so were bred to be larger than wild rabbits at younger ages,[40]but domestic rabbits in modern times range in size fromdwarftogiant.[41][42]Rabbit fur, produced as a byproduct of meat production but occasionally selected for as in the case of theRex rabbit,[43]can be found in a broad range ofcoatcolors and patterns, some of which are produced viadyeing.[44]Some breeds are raised for their wool, such as theAngora rabbitbreeds;[45]their fur is sheared, combed orplucked,and the fibers are spun intoyarn.[46]
Biology
Evolution
The earliest ancestor of rabbits and hares lived 55 million years ago in what is nowMongolia.[47]Because the rabbit'sepiglottisis engaged over the soft palate except when swallowing, the rabbit is anobligate nasal breather.[48]As lagomorphs, rabbits have two sets ofincisorteeth, one behind the other, a manner in which they differ from rodents, which only have one set of incisors.[20]Another difference is that for rabbits, all of their teeth continue to grow, whereas for most rodents, only their incisors continue to grow.Carl Linnaeusoriginally grouped rabbits and rodents under the classGlires;later, they were separated as the scientific consensus is that many of their similarities were a result ofconvergent evolution.DNA analysis and the discovery of a common ancestor have supported the view that they share a common lineage, so rabbits and rodents are now often grouped together in the clade or superorder Glires.[49][16]
Morphology
Since speed and agility are a rabbit's main defenses against predators, rabbits have large hind leg bones and well-developed musculature. Thoughplantigradeat rest, rabbits are on their toes while running, assuming a moredigitigradeposture.[50]Rabbits use their strong claws for digging and (along with their teeth) for defense.[51]Each front foot has four toes plus adewclaw.Each hind foot has four toes (but no dewclaw).[52]
Most wild rabbits (especiallycompared to hares) have relatively full, egg-shaped bodies. The soft coat of the wild rabbit isagoutiin coloration (or, rarely,melanistic), which aids incamouflage.The tail of the rabbit (with the exception of thecottontail species) is dark on top and white below. Cottontails have white on the top of their tails.[53]
As a result of the position of the eyes in its skull and the size of the cornea, the rabbit has a panoramic field of vision that encompasses nearly 360 degrees.[54]However, there is a blind spot at the bridge of the nose, and because of this, rabbits cannot see what is below their mouth and rely on their lips andwhiskersto determine what they are eating. Blinking occurs 2 to 4 times an hour.[49]
Hind limb elements
The anatomy of rabbits' hind limbs is structurally similar to that of other land mammals and contributes to their specialized form of locomotion. The bones of the hind limbs consist of long bones (thefemur,tibia,fibula,andphalanges) as well as short bones (thetarsals). These bones are created throughendochondral ossificationduring fetal development. Like most land mammals, the round head of the femurarticulateswith theacetabulumof theos coxae,the hip bone. The femur articulates with the tibia, but not the fibula, which is fused to the tibia. The tibia and fibula articulate with the tarsals of thepes,commonly called the foot. The hind limbs of the rabbit are longer than the front limbs. This allows them to produce their hopping form of locomotion. Longer hind limbs are more capable of producing faster speeds. Hares, which have longer legs thancottontail rabbits,are able to move considerably faster.[55]The hind feet have four long toes that allow for digitigrade movement, which are webbed to prevent them from spreading when hopping.[56]Rabbits do not have paw pads on their feet like most other animals that use digitigrade locomotion. Instead, they have coarse compressed hair that offers protection.[57]
Musculature
Rabbits have muscled hind legs that allow for maximum force, maneuverability, and acceleration that is divided into three main parts: foot, thigh, and leg. The hind limbs of a rabbit are an exaggerated feature. They are much longer and can provide more force than the forelimbs,[58]which are structured like brakes to take the brunt of the landing after a leap.[59]The force put out by the hind limbs is contributed by both the structural anatomy of the fusion of the tibia and fibula, and by the muscular features.[58]
Bone formation and removal, from a cellular standpoint, is directly correlated to hind limb muscles. Action pressure from muscles creates force that is then distributed through the skeletal structures. Rabbits that generate less force, putting less stress on bones are more prone to osteoporosis due to bonerarefaction.[60]In rabbits, the more fibers in a muscle, the more resistant to fatigue. For example,hareshave a greater resistance to fatigue thancottontails.The muscles of rabbit's hind limbs can be classified into four main categories:hamstrings,quadriceps,dorsiflexors,orplantar flexors.The quadriceps muscles are in charge of force production when jumping. Complementing these muscles are the hamstrings, which aid in short bursts of action. These muscles play off of one another in the same way as the plantar flexors and dorsiflexors, contributing to the generation and actions associated with force.[61]
Ears
Within the order oflagomorphs,the ears are used to detect and avoid predators.[62]In the familyLeporidae,the ears are typically longer than they are wide, and are in general relatively long compared to other mammals.[25][63]
According toAllen's rule,endothermicanimals adapted to colder climates have shorter, thicker limbs and appendages than those of similar animals adapted to warm climates. The rule was originally derived by comparing the ear lengths ofLepusspecies across the various climates of North America.[64]Subsequent studies show that this rule remains true in the Leporidae for the ears specifically,[65]in that the surface area of rabbits' and hares' ears are enlarged in warm climates;[66]the ears are an important structure to aidthermoregulation[67]as well as in detecting predators due to the way the outer, middle, and inner ear muscles coordinate with one another. The ear muscles also aid in maintaining balance and movement when fleeing predators.[68]
Theauricle,also known as the pinna, is a rabbit's outer ear.[69]The rabbit's pinnae represent a fair part of the body surface area. It is theorized that the ears aid in dispersion of heat at temperatures above 30 °C (86 °F), with rabbits in warmer climates having longer pinnae due to this. Another theory is that the ears function as shock absorbers that could aid and stabilize rabbits' vision when fleeing predators, but this has typically only been seen in hares.[49]The rest of the outer ear has bent canals that lead to theeardrumortympanic membrane.[70]
The middle ear, separated by the outer eardrum in the back of the rabbit's skull, contains three bones: the hammer, anvil, and stirrup, collectively calledossicles,which act to decrease sound before it hits the inner ear; in general, the ossicles act as a barrier to the inner ear for sound energy.[70]
Inner ear fluid, calledendolymph,receives the sound energy. After receiving the energy. The inner ear comprises two parts: thecochleathat uses sound waves from the ossicles, and thevestibular apparatusthat manages the rabbit's position in regard to movement. Within the cochlea abasilar membranecontains sensory hair structures that send nerve signals to the brain, allowing it to recognize different sound frequencies. Within the vestibular apparatus three semicircular canals help detectangular motion.[70]
Thermoregulation
The pinnae, which contain a vascular network and arteriovenous shunts, aid in thermoregulation.[49]In a rabbit, the optimal body temperature is around 38.5–40.0 °C (101.3–104.0 °F).[72]If their body temperature exceeds or does not meet this optimal temperature, the rabbit must make efforts to return tohomeostasis.Homeostasis of body temperature is maintained by changing the amount of blood flow that passes through the highly vascularized ears,[67][73]as rabbits have few to nosweat glands.[74]Rabbits may also regulate their temperature by resting in depressions in the ground, known as forms.[75]
Respiratory system
The rabbit's nasal cavity lies dorsal to the oral cavity, and the two compartments are separated by the hard and soft palate.[76]The nasal cavity itself is separated into a left and right side by a cartilage barrier, and it is covered in fine hairs that trap dust before it can enter therespiratory tract.[76][77]As the rabbit breathes, air flows in through the nostrils along the alar folds. From there, the air moves into the nasal cavity, also known as thenasopharynx,down through the trachea, through thelarynx,and into the lungs.[78][79]The larynx functions as the rabbit's voice box, which enables it to produce a wide variety of sounds.[77]The trachea is a long tube embedded with cartilaginous rings that prevent the tube from collapsing as air moves in and out of the lungs. The trachea then splits into a left and right bronchus, which meet the lungs at a structure called thehilum.From there, the bronchi split into progressively more narrow and numerous branches. The bronchi branch into bronchioles, into respiratory bronchioles, and ultimately terminate at the alveolar ducts. The branching that is typically found in rabbit lungs is a clear example of monopodial branching, in which smaller branches divide out laterally from a larger central branch.[80]
The structure of the rabbit's nasal and oral cavities necessitates breathing through the nose. This is due to the fact that the epiglottis is fixed to the backmost portion of the soft palate.[79]Within the oral cavity, a layer of tissue sits over the opening of the glottis, which blocks airflow from the oral cavity to the trachea.[76]The epiglottis functions to prevent the rabbit from aspirating on its food. Further, the presence of a soft and hard palate allow the rabbit to breathe through its nose while it feeds.[78]
Rabbits' lungs are divided into four lobes: the cranial, middle, caudal, and accessory lobes. The right lung is made up of all four lobes, while the left lung only has two: the cranial and caudal lobes.[80]To provide space for the heart, the left cranial lobe of the lungs is significantly smaller than that of the right.[76]The diaphragm is a muscular structure that lies caudal to the lungs and contracts to facilitate respiration.[76][79]
Diet and digestion
Rabbits are strictherbivores[26]and are suited to a diet high in fiber, mostly in the form ofcellulose.They will typicallygrazegrass upon waking up and emerging from a burrow, and will move on to consume vegetation and other plants throughout the waking period; rabbits have been known to eat a wide variety of plants, including tree leaves and fruits, though consumption of fruit and lower fiber foods is common for pet rabbits where natural vegetation is scarce.[81]
Easily digestible food is processed in thegastrointestinal tractand expelled as regular feces. To get nutrients out of hard to digest fiber, rabbits ferment fiber in the cecum (part of the gastrointestinal tract) and then expel the contents ascecotropes,which are reingested (cecotrophy). The cecotropes are then absorbed in the small intestine to use the nutrients.[82]Soft cecotropes are usually consumed during periods of rest in underground burrows.[81]
Rabbits cannot vomit;[83]and therefore if buildup occurs within the intestines (due often to a diet with insufficient fibre),[84]intestinal blockage can occur.[85]
Reproduction
The adult male reproductive system forms the same as most mammals with the seminiferous tubular compartment containing theSertoli cellsand an adluminal compartment that contains theLeydig cells.[86]The Leydig cells producetestosterone,which maintains libido[86]and creates secondary sex characteristics such as thegenital tubercleandpenis.The Sertoli cells triggers the production ofAnti-Müllerian duct hormone,which absorbs the Müllerian duct. In an adult male rabbit, thesheath of the penisis cylinder-like and can be extruded as early as two months of age.[87]The scrotal sacs lay lateral to the penis and containepididymalfat pads which protect the testes. Between 10 and 14 weeks, the testes descend and are able to retract into the pelvic cavity to thermoregulate.[87]Furthermore, the secondary sex characteristics, such as the testes, are complex and secrete many compounds. These compounds includefructose,citric acid,minerals, and a uniquely high amount ofcatalase,[86]all of which affect the characteristics of rabbit semen; for instance, citric acid is positively correlated withagglutination,[88]and high amounts of catalase protect against prematurecapacitation.[89]
The adult female reproductive tract isbipartite,which prevents an embryo from translocating between uteri.[90]The femaleurethraand vagina open into aurogenital sinuswith a singleurogenital opening.[91]The two uterine horns communicate to two cervixes and forms onevaginal canal.Along with being bipartite, the female rabbit does not go through anestrus cycle,which causes matinginduced ovulation.[87]
The average female rabbit becomes sexually mature at three to eight months of age and can conceive at any time of the year for the duration of her life. Egg and sperm production can begin to decline after three years,[86]with some species such as those in genusOryctolaguscompletely stopping reproduction at 6 years of age.[92]During mating, the male rabbit will insert his penis into the female from behind, make rapid pelvic thrusts untilejaculation,and throw himself backward off the female.Copulationlasts only 20–40 seconds.[93]
The rabbitgestationperiod is short and ranges from 27 to 30 days.[26]A longer gestation period will generally yield a smaller litter while shorter gestation periods will give birth to a larger litter. The size of a single litter can range from 1 to 12 kits, depending on species.[94]After birth, the only role of males is to protect the young from other rabbits, and the mother will leave the young in the nest most of the day, returning to nurse them once every 24 hours.[26]The female can become pregnant again as early as the next day.[87]
After mating, the doe will begin to dig a burrow or prepare a nest before giving birth. Between three days and a few hours before giving birth another series of hormonal changes will cause her to prepare the nest structure. The doe will first gather grass for a structure, and an elevation inprolactinshortly before birth will cause her fur to shed that the doe will then use to line the nest, providing insulation for the newborn kits.[95]
The mortality rates of embryos are high in rabbits and can be due to infection, trauma, poor nutrition and environmental stress. A high fertility rate is necessary to counter this.[87]More than half of rabbit pregnancies are aborted, causing embryos to be resorbed into the mother's body;[92]vitamin deficiencies are a major cause of abortions in domestic rabbits.[96]
Sleep
Rabbits may appear to becrepuscular,but many species[26]are naturally inclined towardsnocturnalactivity.[97]In 2011, the average sleep time of a rabbit in captivity was calculated at 8.4 hours per day;[98]previous studies have estimated sleep periods as long as 11.4 hours on average, undergoing bothslow-waveandrapid eye movement sleep.[99][100]Newborn rabbits will sleep for 22 hours a day before leaving the nest.[101]As with otherprey animals,rabbits often sleep with their eyes open, so that sudden movements will awaken the rabbit to respond to potential danger.[102]
Diseases and immunity
In addition to being at risk of disease from common pathogens such asBordetella bronchisepticaandEscherichia coli,rabbits can contract the virulent, species-specific virusesmyxomatosis,[103]and a form of calicivirus which causesrabbit hemorrhagic disease.[104]Myxomatosis is more hazardous to pet rabbits, as wild rabbits often have some immunity.[105]Among the parasites that infect rabbits are tapeworms (such asTaenia serialis),external parasites (including fleas and mites),coccidiaspecies,Encephalitozoon cuniculi,[106]andToxoplasma gondii.[107][108]Domesticated rabbits with a diet lacking in high-fiber sources, such as hay and grass, are susceptible to potentially lethal gastrointestinal stasis.[109]Rabbits and hares are almost never found to be infected withrabiesand have not been known to transmit rabies to humans.[110]
Rabbit hemorrhagic disease(RHD) is a highly infectious rabbit-specific disease caused by strains ofrabbit hemorrhagic disease virus(RHDV), includingtype 2(RHDV2).[111]The disease was first described in domestic Angora rabbits imported from Germany toJiangsu,China in 1984, and quickly spread to Korea, Italy, and the rest of Europe. The disease spread to the Americas from 1988, first appearing in rabbits imported to Mexico, but subsequent outbreaks were infrequent, as RHDV only affected the European rabbit species.[112]RHDV2, a strain of RHD-causing virus that affects both domestic and wild lagomorphs, such as hares, was detected for the first time in France in 2010.[113]RHDV2 has since spread to the rest of Europe, Canada,[114]Australia,[115]and the United States.[116][111]
Ecology
Rabbits arepreyanimals. In Mediterranean Europe, for example, rabbits are the main prey of red foxes, badgers, and Iberian lynxes.[117]To avoid predation and to navigate underground, rabbits have heightened senses (compared to humans) and are constantly aware of their surroundings. If confronted by a potential threat, a rabbit may freeze and observe, then warn others in the warren with powerful thumps on the ground from a hind foot. Rabbits have a remarkably wide field of vision, and a good deal of it is devoted to overhead scanning.[118]A rabbit eye has no fovea, but a "visual streak", a horizontal line in the middle of the retina where both rod and cone cell densities are the highest. This allows them to scan the horizon with little head turning.[119][120]
Rabbits survive predation by burrowing (in some species),[121]and hopping away[59]to dense cover.[26]Their strong teeth allow them to bite to escape a struggle.[122]
The longest-lived rabbit on record, a domesticatedEuropean rabbitliving inTasmania,died at age 18.[123]The lifespan of wild rabbits is much shorter; the average longevity of aneastern cottontail,for instance, is about one[124]to five years.[125]The various species of rabbit have been recorded as living from four[126][127]to 13 years in captivity.[128][129]
Habitat and range
Rabbit habitats include forests, steppes, plateaus, deserts,[130]and swamps.[131]Rabbits live in groups, or colonies, varying in behavior depending on species and often using theburrowsof other animals or creating nests in holes.[121]TheEuropean rabbitnotably lives in extensive burrow networks calledwarrens.[132]
Rabbits are native to North America, southwestern Europe, Southeast Asia,Sumatra,some islands of Japan, and parts of Africa and South America. They are not naturally found in most ofEurasia,where a number of species ofharesare present.[133]A 2003 study on domestic rabbits in China found that "(so-called) Chinese rabbits were introduced from Europe", and that "genetic diversity in Chinese rabbits was very low".[134]
Rabbits first entered South America relatively recently, as part of theGreat American Interchange.[133]Much of the continent was considered to have just one species of rabbit, thetapeti,[135][b]and most of South America'sSouthern Conehas had no rabbits until the introduction of the European rabbit, which has been introduced to many places around the world,[53]in the late 19th century.[136]
Rabbits have beenlaunched into space orbit.[137]
Marking
Both sexes of rabbits often rub their chins on objects with theirscent glandlocated under the chin. This is the rabbit's way of marking their territory or possessions for other rabbits to recognize by depositing scent gland secretions. Rabbits who have bonded will respect each other's smell, which indicates a territorial border.[138]Rabbits also have scent glands that produce a strong-smelling waxy substance near their anuses.[139]Territorial marking by scent glands has been documented among both domestic[140]and wild rabbit species.[26]
Environmental problems
Rabbits, particularly the European rabbit,[26]have been a source of environmental problems when introduced into the wild by humans. As a result of their appetites, and the rate at which they breed,feralrabbit depredation can be problematic for agriculture. Gassing (fumigationof warrens),[141]barriers (fences),[142]shooting, snaring, andferreting[143][144]have been used to control rabbit populations,[145]but the most effective measures are diseases such asmyxomatosisandcalicivirus.[146]In Europe, where domestic rabbits are farmed on a large scale, they can be protected against myxomatosis and calicivirus via vaccination.[147]Rabbits in Australiaand New Zealand are considered to be such a pest that landowners are legally obliged to control them.[148][149]
Rabbits are known to be able to catch fire and spread wildfires, but the efficiency and relevance of this method has been doubted by forest experts who contend that a rabbit on fire could move some meters.[150][151]Knowledge on fire-spreading rabbits is based on anecdotes as there is no known scientific investigation on the subject.[151]
As food and clothing
Humans have hunted rabbits for food since at least the onset of theLast Glacial Maximum,[152]and wild rabbits and hares are still hunted for their meat asgame.[153]Hunting is accomplished with the aid of trainedfalcons,[154]ferrets,[155]ordogs(a common hunting breed beingbeagles),[156]as well as withsnares,[157]rifles and other guns.[156]A caught rabbit may be dispatched with a sharp blow to the back of its head, a practice from which the termrabbit punchis derived.[1][158]
Wild leporids comprise a small portion of global rabbit-meat consumption. Domesticated descendants of the European rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus) that are bred and kept as livestock (a practice calledcuniculture) account for the estimated 200million tons of rabbit meat produced annually.[159]Approximately 1.2 billion rabbits are slaughtered each year for meat worldwide.[160]In 1994, the countries with the highest consumption per capita of rabbit meat wereMaltawith 8.89 kg (19.6 lb), Italy with 5.71 kg (12.6 lb), andCypruswith 4.37 kg (9.6 lb). The largest producers of rabbit meat were China, Russia, Italy (specificallyVeneto[103]), France, and Spain.[161]Rabbit meat was once a common commodity in Sydney, with European rabbits having been introduced intentionally to Australia for hunting purposes,[162]but declined after themyxomatosisvirus was intentionally introduced to control the exploding population offeral rabbits in the area.[163]
In the United Kingdom, fresh rabbits are sold in butcher shops and markets, and some supermarkets sell frozen rabbit meat. It is sold in farmers markets there, including theBorough Marketin London.[164]Rabbit meat is a feature of Moroccan cuisine, where it is cooked in atajinewith "raisins and grilled almonds added a few minutes before serving".[165]In China, rabbit meat is particularly popular inSichuan cuisine,with its stewed rabbit, spicy diced rabbit, BBQ-style rabbit, and even spicy rabbit heads, which have been compared tospicy duck neck.[159]In the United States, rabbits sold as food are typically the domestic New Zealand,Belgian,and Chinese rabbits, or Scottish hares.[166]
An infectious disease associated with rabbits-as-food istularemia(also known asrabbit fever), which may be contracted from an infected rabbit.[167]The disease can cause symptoms offever,skin ulcersandenlarged lymph nodes,and can occasionally lead to pneumonia or throat infection.[168]Secondary vectors of tularemia includetickand fly bites, which may be present in the fur of a caught rabbit.[167]Inhaling the bacteria during the skinning process increases the risk of getting tularemia;[169]preventative measures against this include the use of gloves andface masks.Prior to the development ofantibiotics,such asdocycyclineandgentamicin,the death rate associated with tularemia infections was 60%, which has since decreased to less than 4%.[170]
In addition to their meat, domestic rabbits are used for theirwool[46]andfurfor clothing,[171]as well as their nitrogen-rich manure and their high-protein milk.[172]Production industries have developed domesticated rabbit breeds (such as theAngora rabbit) for the purpose of meeting these needs.[43]In 1986, the number of rabbit skins produced annually in France was as high as 70 million, compared to 25 millionminkpelts produced at the same time. However, rabbit fur is on the whole a byproduct of rabbit meat production, whereas minks are bred primarily for fur production.[173]
In culture
Rabbits are often posited by scholars as symbols offertility,[174]sexualityand spring, though they have been variously interpreted throughout history.[175]Up until the end of the 18th century, it was widely believed that rabbits and hares werehermaphrodites,contributing to a possible view of rabbits as "sexually aberrant".[176]TheEaster Bunnyis a figure from German folklore that then spread to America and later other parts of the world and is similar toSanta Claus,albeit both with softened roles compared to earlier incarnations of the figures.[177]
The rabbits' role as a prey animal with few defenses evokes vulnerability and innocence in folklore and modern children's stories, and rabbits appear as sympathetic characters, able to connect easily with youth, though this particular symbolic depiction only became popular in the 1930s following the massive popularization of the pet rabbit decades before.[174]Additionally, they have not been limited to sympathetic depictions since then, as in literature such asWatership Down[178][179]and the works ofAriel Dorfman.[180]With its reputation as a prolific breeder, the rabbit juxtaposes sexuality with innocence, as in thePlayboy Bunny.[181]The rabbit has also been used as a symbol of playfulness and endurance, as represented by theEnergizer Bunnyand theDuracell Bunny.[182]
Folklore and mythology
The rabbit often appears in folklore as thetricksterarchetype,as he uses his cunning to outwit his enemies. In Central Africa, the common hare (Kalulu) is described as a trickster figure,[183]and inAztec mythology,a pantheon of four hundred rabbit gods known asCentzon Totochtin,led byOmetochtlior Two Rabbit, represented fertility, parties, and drunkenness.[184]Rabbits in the Americas varied in mythological symbolism: in Aztec mythology, they were also associated with the moon,[184]and inAnishinaabe traditional beliefs,held by theOjibweand some otherNative Americanpeoples,Nanabozho,or Great Rabbit,[185]is an important deity related to the creation of the world.[186]More broadly, arabbit's footmay be carried as anamulet,believed to bring protection andgood luck.This belief is found in many parts of the world, with the earliest use being recorded in Europec. 600 BC.[187]
Rabbits also appear in Chinese, Vietnamese, Japanese and Korean mythology, though rabbits are a relatively new introduction to some of these regions. InChinese folklore,rabbits accompanyChang'eon the Moon,[188]and the moon rabbit is a prominent symbol in theMid-Autumn Festival.[189]In theChinese New Year,thezodiacal rabbitor hare is one of the twelve celestial animals in theChinese zodiac.[190]At the time of the zodiacal cycles becoming associated with animals in the Han dynasty,[191]only hares were native to China, with the currently extant breeds of rabbit in China being of European origin.[134]TheVietnamese zodiacincludes azodiacal catin place of the rabbit. The most common explanation is that the ancient Vietnamese word for "rabbit"(mao)sounds like the Chinese word for "cat" (Mão,mao).[192]InJapanese tradition,rabbitslive on the Moonwhere they makemochi.[193]This comes from interpreting the pattern of dark patches on the moon as a rabbit standing on tiptoes on the left pounding on anusu,a Japanese mortar.[194]InKorean mythology,as in Japanese, rabbits live on the moon making rice cakes ( "tteok"in Korean).[195]
Rabbits have also appeared in religious symbolism.Buddhism,Christianity, and Judaism have associations with an ancient circular motif called thethree rabbits(or "three hares" ). Its meaning ranges from "peace and tranquility"[196]to theHoly Trinity.[197]The tripartite symbol also appears inheraldry.[198]InJewish folklore,rabbits are associated with cowardice, a usage still current in contemporary Israeli spokenHebrew.The original Hebrew word (shfanim, שפנים) refers to thehyrax,but early translations to English interpreted the word to mean "rabbit", as no hyraxes were known to northern Europe.[199]
-
Rabbit fools Elephant by showing the reflection of the moon.Illustration (from 1354) of thePanchatantra
-
Saint Jerome in the Desert,byTaddeo Crivelli(died about 1479)
Modern times
The rabbit astricksteris a part of American popular culture, asBr'er Rabbit(from African-American folktales[200]and, later,Disney animation[201]) andBugs Bunny(thecartooncharacter fromWarner Bros.[202]), for example.
Anthropomorphized rabbits have appeared in film and literature, inAlice's Adventures in Wonderland(theWhite Rabbitand theMarch Harecharacters), inWatership Down(including thefilmandtelevisionadaptations), inRabbit Hill(byRobert Lawson), and in thePeter Rabbitstories (byBeatrix Potter). In the 1920s,Oswald the Lucky Rabbitwas a popular cartoon character.[203]
On theIsle of Portlandin Dorset, UK, the rabbit is said to be unlucky, and speaking the creature's name can cause upset among older island residents. This is thought to date back to early times in the local quarrying industry, where, to save space, extracted stones that were not fit for sale were set aside in what became tall, unstable walls. The local rabbits' tendency to burrow there would weaken the walls, and their collapse would result in injuries or even death. In the local culture to this day, the rabbit (when he has to be referred to) may instead be called a "long ears" or "underground mutton" so as not to risk bringing a downfall upon oneself.[204]
In other parts of Britain and in North America, "Rabbit rabbit rabbit"is one variant of anapotropaicortalismanicsuperstition that involves saying or repeating the word "rabbit" (or "rabbits" or "white rabbits" or some combination thereof) out loud upon waking on the first day of each month, because doing so is believed to ensure good fortune for the duration of that month.[205]
The "rabbit test" is a term first used in 1949 for theFriedman test,an early diagnostic tool for detecting a pregnancy in humans. It is a common misconception (or perhaps anurban legend) that the test-rabbit would die if the woman was pregnant. This led to the phrase "the rabbit died" becoming a euphemism for a positive pregnancy test.[206]
Many modern children's stories and cartoons portray rabbits as particularly fond of eating carrots. This is a misleading as wild rabbits do not naturally prefer carrots over other plants. Carrots are high in sugar, and excessive consumption can be unhealthy.[207]This has led to some owners of domestic rabbits feeding a carrot heavy diet on this false perception.[208][209]
See also
References
Notes
- ^This genus is a hare, not a rabbit.
- ^In addition to the common tapeti, several other species in genusSylvilagusare known to inhabit South and Central America: theAndean tapeti,theCentral American tapeti,thecoastal tapeti,theSanta Marta tapeti,and theVenezuelan lowland rabbit.
Citations
- ^abHarper, Douglas."rabbit".Online Etymology Dictionary.Retrieved17 September2024.
- ^abHarper, Douglas."coney".Online Etymology Dictionary.Retrieved17 September2024.
- ^Zapletal, D.; Švancarová, D.; Gálik, B. (2021)."Growth of suckled rabbit kits depending on litter size at birth".Acta Fytotechnica et Zootechnica.24(1): 55–59.doi:10.15414/afz.2021.24.01.55-59.ISSN1335-258X.
- ^Booth, J.L.; Peng, X.; Baccon, J.; Cooper, T.K. (2013)."Multiple complex congenital malformations in a rabbit kit (Oryctolagus cuniculi)".Comparative Medicine.63(4): 342–347.PMC3750670.PMID24209970.
- ^Harper, Douglas."bunny".Online Etymology Dictionary.Retrieved21 October2024.
- ^Ballester, X.; Quinn, R. (2002)."Cuniculus'Rabbit' — A Celtic Etymology "(PDF).World Rabbit Science.10(3).
- ^Lipton, James (1 November 1993).An Exaltation of Larks: The Ultimate Edition.Penguin Books.ISBN0-140-17096-0.
- ^ab"Common Questions: What Do You Call a Group of...?".archived copy of Animal Congregations, or What Do You Call a Group of.....?.U.S. Geological Survey Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center. Archived fromthe originalon 20 March 2015.Retrieved26 February2018.
- ^"Warren Definition & Meaning".Britannica Dictionary.2024.Retrieved7 October2024.
- ^McClure, Diane (August 2020)."Breeding and Reproduction of Rabbits".Merck Veterinary Manual.Archivedfrom the original on 2 October 2024.Retrieved7 October2024.
- ^"Buck".Dictionary.com Unabridged.Random House, Inc. 2023.Retrieved6 October2024.
- ^"Doe".Dictionary.com.Retrieved6 October2024.
- ^Korth, William W. (1994),"Classification of Rodents",The Tertiary Record of Rodents in North America,Topics in Geobiology, vol. 12, Boston, MA: Springer US, pp. 27–34,doi:10.1007/978-1-4899-1444-6_4,ISBN978-1-4899-1444-6,retrieved16 September2024
- ^Asher RJ, Meng J, Wible JR, et al. (February 2005). "Stem Lagomorpha and the antiquity of Glires".Science.307(5712): 1091–4.Bibcode:2005Sci...307.1091A.doi:10.1126/science.1107808.PMID15718468.S2CID42090505.
- ^
- Madsen O, Scally M, Douady CJ, et al. (February 2001). "Parallel adaptive radiations in two major clades of placental mammals".Nature.409(6820): 610–4.Bibcode:2001Natur.409..610M.doi:10.1038/35054544.PMID11214318.S2CID4398233.
- Murphy WJ, Eizirik E, Johnson WE, Zhang YP, Ryder OA, O'Brien SJ (February 2001). "Molecular phylogenetics and the origins of placental mammals".Nature.409(6820): 614–8.Bibcode:2001Natur.409..614M.doi:10.1038/35054550.PMID11214319.S2CID4373847.
- ^abKriegs, JO; Churakov, G; Jurka, J; Brosius, J; Schmitz, J (April 2007). "Evolutionary history of 7SL RNA-derived SINEs in Supraprimates".Trends in Genetics.23(4): 158–61.doi:10.1016/j.tig.2007.02.002.PMID17307271.
- ^Huchon, Dorothée; Madsen, Ole; Sibbald, Mark J. J. B.; Ament, Kai; Stanhope, Michael J.; Catzeflis, François; de Jong, Wilfried W.; Douzery, Emmanuel J. P. (1 July 2002)."Rodent Phylogeny and a Timescale for the Evolution of Glires: Evidence from an Extensive Taxon Sampling Using Three Nuclear Genes".Molecular Biology and Evolution.19(7): 1053–1065.doi:10.1093/oxfordjournals.molbev.a004164.ISSN1537-1719.PMID12082125.
- ^Matthee, Conrad A.; et al. (2004)."A Molecular Supermatrix of the Rabbits and Hares (Leporidae) Allows for the Identification of Five Intercontinental Exchanges During the Miocene".Systematic Biology.53(3): 433–477.doi:10.1080/10635150490445715.PMID15503672.
- ^Hoffman, R.S.; Smith, A.T. (2005)."Order Lagomorpha".InWilson, D.E.;Reeder, D.M (eds.).Mammal Species of the World: A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference(3rd ed.). Johns Hopkins University Press. pp. 194–211.ISBN978-0-8018-8221-0.OCLC62265494.
- ^abcAlves, Ferrand & Hackländer 2008,pp. 1–9.
- ^Varga 2013,p. 3.
- ^Nowak 1999,p. 1720.
- ^abNowak 1999,pp. 1733–1738.
- ^abAngerbjörn & Schai-Braun 2023,pp. 205–206.
- ^abScandura, Massimo; De Marinis, Anna Maria; Canu, Antonio (2023), Hackländer, Klaus; Alves, Paulo C. (eds.),"Cape Hare Lepus capensis Linnaeus, 1758",Primates and Lagomorpha,Cham: Springer International Publishing, pp. 79–98,doi:10.1007/978-3-030-34043-8_10,ISBN978-3-030-34042-1,retrieved16 September2024
- ^abcdefghiBell, Diana; Smith, Andrew T. (2006),"Rabbits and Hares",The Encyclopedia of Mammals,Oxford University Press,doi:10.1093/acref/9780199206087.001.0001,ISBN978-0-19-920608-7,retrieved9 October2024
- ^Rodríguez-Martínez, Luisa; Hudson, Robyn; Martínez-Gómez, Margarita; Bautista, Amando (January 2014)."Description of the nursery burrow of the Mexican cottontail rabbit Sylvilagus cunicularius under seminatural conditions".Acta Theriologica.59(1): 193–201.doi:10.1007/s13364-012-0125-6.ISSN0001-7051.
- ^Delibes-Mateos et al. 2023,pp. 44–45.
- ^Varga 2013,pp. 3–4.
- ^"Desert Cottontail (Sylvilagus audubonii) ".Texas Parks & Wildlife.Archivedfrom the original on 11 June 2017.
- ^Chapman, Joseph (1990).Rabbits, hares, and pikas: status survey and conservation action plan.International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources. p. 99.ISBN2-8317-0019-1.
- ^Alves, Ferrand & Hackländer 2008,pp. 241–249.
- ^Angerbjörn & Schai-Braun 2023,pp. 119–219.
- ^Lyon, M. W. (1916)."Belgian Hare, A Misleading Misnomer".Science.43(1115): 686–687.doi:10.1126/science.43.1115.686.b.ISSN0036-8075.JSTOR1639908.PMID17831801.
- ^Whitman, Bob D. (October 2004).Domestic Rabbits & Their Histories: Breeds of the World.Leawood, KS: Leathers Publishing. pp. 74–95.ISBN978-1-58597-275-3.
- ^Irving-Pease, Evan K.; Frantz, Laurent A.F.; Sykes, Naomi; Callou, Cécile; Larson, Greger (2018)."Rabbits and the Specious Origins of Domestication".Trends in Ecology & Evolution.33(3): 149–152.Bibcode:2018TEcoE..33..149I.doi:10.1016/j.tree.2017.12.009.ISSN0169-5347.PMID29454669.S2CID3380288.
- ^Mapara, M.; Thomas, B.; Bhat, K. (2012)."Rabbit as an animal model for experimental research".Dental Research Journal.9(1): 111–8.doi:10.4103/1735-3327.92960(inactive 1 November 2024).PMC3283968.PMID22363373.
Amongst various strains, New Zealand white strains of rabbits are commonly being used for research activities. These strains are less aggressive in nature and have less health problems as compared with other breeds.
{{cite journal}}
:CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of November 2024 (link) - ^Julie Kimber; Phillip Deery; Warwick Eather; Drew Cottle; Michael Hamel-Green; Nic Maclelland; Doris LeRoy; Jeanette Debney-Joyce; Jonathan Strauss; David Faber (2014).Issues on War and Peace.Australian Society for the Study of Labour History/Leftbank Press. p. 10.ISBN978-0-9803883-3-6.
- ^Marco Cullere; Antonella Dalle Zotte (2018). "Rabbit meat production and consumption: State of knowledge and future perspectives".Meat Science.143:137–146.doi:10.1016/j.meatsci.2018.04.029.PMID29751220.
- ^"Meat Production",Rabbit Production(10 ed.), GB: CABI, pp. 274–277, 11 May 2022,doi:10.1079/9781789249811.0023,ISBN978-1-78924-978-1,retrieved23 May2024
- ^Tislerics, Ati."Oryctolagus cuniculus".Animal Diversity Web.Retrieved21 May2024.
- ^Fiorello, Christine V.; German, R.Z. (February 1997)."Heterochrony within species: craniofacial growth in giant, standard, and dwarf rabbits".Evolution.51(1): 250–261.doi:10.1111/j.1558-5646.1997.tb02406.x.PMID28568789.S2CID205780205.
- ^ab"Rabbit Breeds",Rabbit Production(10 ed.), GB: CABI, pp. 23–28, 11 May 2022,doi:10.1079/9781789249811.0003,ISBN978-1-78924-978-1,archivedfrom the original on 14 May 2024,retrieved14 May2024
- ^Davis, Susan (2003).Stories Rabbits Tell.Lantern Books. p. 268.ISBN978-1-59056-044-0.
- ^Campbell, Darlene (1995).Proper Care of Rabbits.TFH Publications, Incorporated. p. 206.ISBN978-0-86622-196-2.
- ^abSamson, Leslie (11 May 2022),"Angora Wool Production",Rabbit Production(10 ed.), GB: CABI, pp. 292–302,doi:10.1079/9781789249811.0022,ISBN978-1-78924-978-1,retrieved26 May2024
- ^Asher, RJ; Meng, J; Wible, JR; McKenna, MC; Rougier, GW; Dashzeveg, D; Novacek, MJ (18 February 2005). "Stem Lagomorpha and the antiquity of Glires".Science.307(5712): 1091–4.Bibcode:2005Sci...307.1091A.doi:10.1126/science.1107808.PMID15718468.
- ^Johnson-Delaney, CA; Orosz, SE (May 2011). "Rabbit respiratory system: clinical anatomy, physiology and disease".Vet Clin North Am Exot Anim Pract.14(2): 257–66.doi:10.1016/j.cvex.2011.03.002.PMID21601814.
- ^abcdDonnelly, Thomas M.; Vella, David (2020). "Basic Anatomy, Physiology, and Husbandry of Rabbits". In Quesenberry, Katherine; Orcutt, Connie J.; Mans, Christoph; Carpenter, James W. (eds.).Ferrets, Rabbits, and Rodents: Clinical Medicine and Surgery(4th ed.). pp. 131–149.doi:10.1016/B978-0-323-48435-0.00011-3.ISBN978-0-323-48435-0.
- ^Hall, Patrick; Stubbs, Caleb; Anderson, David E.; Greenacre, Cheryl; Crouch, Dustin L. (17 June 2022)."Rabbit hindlimb kinematics and ground contact kinetics during the stance phase of gait".PeerJ.10:e13611.doi:10.7717/peerj.13611.ISSN2167-8359.PMC9208372.PMID35734635.
- ^d'Ovidio, Dario; Pierantoni, Ludovica; Noviello, Emilio; Pirrone, Federica (September 2016). "Sex differences in human-directed social behavior in pet rabbits".Journal of Veterinary Behavior.15:37–42.doi:10.1016/j.jveb.2016.08.072.
- ^van Praag, Esther (2005)."Deformed claws in a rabbit, after traumatic fractures"(PDF).MediRabbit.
- ^ab"rabbit".Encyclopædia Britannica(Standard ed.). Chicago:Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.2007.
- ^Peiffer, Robert L.; Pohm-Thorsen, Laurie; Corcoran, Kelly (1994), "Models in Ophthalmology and Vision Research",The Biology of the Laboratory Rabbit,Elsevier: 409–433,doi:10.1016/b978-0-12-469235-0.50025-7,ISBN978-0-12-469235-0,PMC7149682
- ^Bensley, Benjamin Arthur (1910).Practical anatomy of the rabbit.The University Press. p.1.
rabbit skeletal anatomy.
- ^"Description and Physical Characteristics of Rabbits – All Other Pets – Merck Veterinary Manual".Merck Veterinary Manual.Retrieved11 May2018.
- ^D.A.B.V.P., Margaret A. Wissman, D.V.M."Rabbit Anatomy".exoticpetvet.net.Retrieved11 May2018.
{{cite web}}
:CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^abSusan, Lumpkin; Seidensticker, John (2011).Rabbits: the animal answer guide.Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.ISBN978-1-4214-0126-3.OCLC794700391.
- ^abKhan, Madiha; Suh, Angela; Lee, Jenny; Granatosky, Michael C. (2021),"Lagomorpha Locomotion",in Vonk, Jennifer; Shackelford, Todd (eds.),Encyclopedia of Animal Cognition and Behavior,Cham: Springer International Publishing, pp. 1–6,doi:10.1007/978-3-319-47829-6_1199-1,ISBN978-3-319-47829-6,retrieved8 October2024
- ^Geiser, Max; Trueta, Joseph (May 1958)."Muscle action, bone rarefaction and bone formation".The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery. British Volume.40-B(2): 282–311.doi:10.1302/0301-620X.40B2.282.PMID13539115.
- ^Lieber, Richard L.; Blevins, Field T. (January 1989). "Skeletal muscle architecture of the rabbit hindlimb: Functional implications of muscle design".Journal of Morphology.199(1): 93–101.doi:10.1002/jmor.1051990108.PMID2921772.S2CID25344889.
- ^Varga 2013,p. 62.
- ^Bertolino, Sandro; Brown, David E.; Cerri, Jacopo; Koprowski, John L. (2023), Hackländer, Klaus; Alves, Paulo C. (eds.),"Eastern Cottontail Sylvilagus floridanus (J. A. Allen, 1890)",Primates and Lagomorpha,Cham: Springer International Publishing, pp. 67–78,doi:10.1007/978-3-030-34043-8_14,ISBN978-3-030-34042-1,retrieved16 September2024
- ^Allen, Joel Asaph(1877)."The influence of Physical conditions in the genesis of species".Radical Review.1:108–140.
- ^Stevenson, Robert D. (1986)."Allen's Rule in North American Rabbits (Sylvilagus) and Hares (Lepus) Is an Exception, Not a Rule".Journal of Mammalogy.67(2): 312–316.doi:10.2307/1380884.ISSN0022-2372.JSTOR1380884.
- ^"Black-tailed Jackrabbit - Lepus californicus".Montana Field Guide.Montana Natural Heritage Program and Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks.Retrieved24 September2024.
- ^abKluger, Matthew J.; Gonzalez, Richard R.; Mitchell, John W.; Hardy, James D. (1 August 1971). "The rabbit ear as a temperature sensor".Life Sciences.10(15): 895–899.doi:10.1016/0024-3205(71)90161-5.PMID5566134.
- ^Meyer, D. L. (1971). "Single Unit Responses of Rabbit Ear-Muscles to Postural and Accelerative Stimulation".Experimental Brain Research.14(2): 118–26.doi:10.1007/BF00234795.PMID5016586.S2CID6466476.
- ^Capello, Vittorio (2006)."Lateral Ear Canal Resection and Ablation in Pet Rabbits"(PDF).The North American Veterinary Conference.20:1711–1713.
- ^abcParsons, Paige K. (2018)."Rabbit Ears: A Structural Look:...injury or disease, can send your rabbit into a spin".House Rabbit Society.
- ^Hinds, David S. (31 August 1973). "Acclimatization of Thermoregulation in the Desert Cottontail, Sylvilagus audubonii".Journal of Mammalogy.54(3): 708–728.doi:10.2307/1378969.JSTOR1378969.PMID4744934.
- ^Fayez, I; Marai, M; Alnaimy, A; Habeeb, M (1994)."Thermoregulation in rabbits".In Baselga, M; Marai, I.F.M. (eds.).Rabbit production in hot climates.Zaragoza: CIHEAM. pp. 33–41.
- ^Varga 2013,p. 12.
- ^Oladimeji, Abioja Monsuru; Johnson, Temitope Gloria; Metwally, Khaled; Farghly, Mohamed; Mahrose, Khalid Mohamed (January 2022)."Environmental heat stress in rabbits: implications and ameliorations".International Journal of Biometeorology.66(1): 1–11.doi:10.1007/s00484-021-02191-0.ISSN0020-7128.PMID34518931.
- ^Milling, Charlotte R; Rachlow, Janet L; Johnson, Timothy R; Forbey, Jennifer S; Shipley, Lisa A (1 September 2017)."Seasonal variation in behavioral thermoregulation and predator avoidance in a small mammal".Behavioral Ecology.28(5): 1236–1247.doi:10.1093/beheco/arx084.ISSN1045-2249.
- ^abcdeJohnson-Delaney, Cathy A.; Orosz, Susan E. (2011). "Rabbit Respiratory System: Clinical Anatomy, Physiology and Disease".Veterinary Clinics of North America: Exotic Animal Practice.14(2): 257–266.doi:10.1016/j.cvex.2011.03.002.PMID21601814.
- ^abSmith & Schenk 2019,p. 73.
- ^abSmith & Schenk 2019,p. 76.
- ^abcJekl, Vladimi (2012)."Approach to Rabbit Respiratory Disease".WSAVA/FECAVA/BSAVA World Congress.
As obligate nasal breathers, rabbits with upper airway disease will attempt to breathe through their mouths, which prevents feeding and drinking and could be quickly fatal.
- ^abAutifi, Mohamed Abdul Haye; El-Banna, Ahmed Kamal; Ebaid, Ashraf El- Sayed (2015)."Morphological Study of Rabbit Lung, Bronchial Tree, and Pulmonary Vessels Using Corrosion Cast Technique".Al-Azhar Assiut Medical Journal.13(3): 41–51.
- ^abVarga 2013,pp. 13–33.
- ^Smith, Susan M. (2020). "Gastrointestinal Physiology and Nutrition of Rabbits". In Quesenberry, Katherine; Orcutt, Connie J.; Mans, Christoph; Carpenter, James W. (eds.).Ferrets, Rabbits, and Rodents: Clinical Medicine and Surgery(4th ed.). pp. 162–173.doi:10.1016/B978-0-323-48435-0.00013-7.ISBN978-0-323-48435-0.
- ^Bernard E. Rollin (13 March 1995).The Experimental Animal in Biomedical Research: Care, Husbandry, and Well-Being-An Overview by Species, Volume 2.CRC Press. p. 359.ISBN978-0-8493-4982-9.
- ^Karr-Lilienthal, Phd (University of Nebraska – Lincoln), Lisa (4 November 2011)."The Digestive System of the Rabbit".eXtension (a Part of the Cooperative Extension Service).Archivedfrom the original on 6 January 2018.Retrieved5 January2018.
- ^"Living with a House Rabbit".Archivedfrom the original on 21 September 2017.Retrieved21 September2017.
- ^abcdFoote, Robert H; Carney, Edward W (2000). "The rabbit as a model for reproductive and developmental toxicity studies".Reproductive Toxicology.14(6): 477–493.Bibcode:2000RepTx..14..477F.doi:10.1016/s0890-6238(00)00101-5.ISSN0890-6238.PMID11099874.
- ^abcdePollock, C. (5 May 2014)."Rabbit Reproduction Basics".LafeberVet.Retrieved18 September2024.
- ^Holtz, W.; Foote, R. H. (1 March 1978)."Composition of Rabbit Semen and the Origin of Several Constituents".Biology of Reproduction.18(2): 286–292.doi:10.1095/biolreprod18.2.286.ISSN0006-3363.PMID630026.
- ^Foote, Robert H.; Hare, Elizabeth (10 September 2000)."High Catalase Content of Rabbit Semen Appears to be Inherited".Journal of Andrology.21(5): 664–668.doi:10.1002/j.1939-4640.2000.tb02134.x.ISSN0196-3635.PMID10975413.
- ^Weisbroth, Steven H.; Flatt, Ronald E.; Kraus, Alan L. (1974).The Biology of the Laboratory Rabbit.doi:10.1016/c2013-0-11681-9.ISBN978-0-12-742150-6.
- ^Lukefahr, Steven D.; McNitt, James I.; Cheeke, Peter R.; Patton, Nephi M. (29 April 2022).Rabbit Production, 10th Edition.CABI.ISBN978-1-78924-978-1.
- ^abNowak 1999,p. 1730.
- ^"Understanding the Mating Process for Breeding Rabbits".florida4h.org.Retrieved12 April2019.
- ^Nowak 1999,pp. 1720–1732.
- ^Benedek, I; Altbӓcker, V; Molnár, T (2021)."Stress reactivity near birth affects nest building timing and offspring number and survival in the European rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus) ".PLOS ONE.16(1): e0246258.Bibcode:2021PLoSO..1646258B.doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0246258.PMC7845978.PMID33513198.
- ^Varga 2013,pp. 34–38.
- ^Jilge, B (1991). "The rabbit: a diurnal or a nocturnal animal?".Journal of Experimental Animal Science.34(5–6): 170–183.PMID1814463.
- ^Holland, Jennifer S. (July 2011). "40 Winks?".National Geographic.220(1).
- ^Pivik, R.T.; Bylsma, F.W.; Cooper, P. (May 1986). "Sleep—wakefulness rhythms in the rabbit".Behavioral and Neural Biology.45(3): 275–286.doi:10.1016/S0163-1047(86)80016-4.PMID3718392.
- ^Aguilar-Roblero, R; González-Mariscal, G. (2020). "Behavioral, neuroendocrine and physiological indicators of the circadian biology of male and female rabbits".Eur J Neurosci.51(1): 429–453.doi:10.1111/ejn.14265.PMID30408249.
- ^Varga 2013,pp. 84–85.
- ^Parsons, Paige K."The Rabbit Eye: A Complete Guide".Rabbit.Org Foundation.Retrieved17 September2024.
- ^abDavidson, Alan (2014). Jaine, Tom (ed.).The Oxford Companion to Food(3rd ed.). Oxford University Press. pp. 1899–1901.doi:10.1093/acref/9780199677337.001.0001.ISBN9780191756276.
- ^Cooke, Brian Douglas (2014).Australia's War Against Rabbits.CSIRO Publishing.ISBN978-0-643-09612-7.Archivedfrom the original on 7 June 2014.
- ^
- Meredith, A (2013). "Viral skin diseases of the rabbit".Veterinary Clinics of North America: Exotic Animal Practice.16(3): 705–714.doi:10.1016/j.cvex.2013.05.010.PMID24018033.
- Kerr, P (2017)."Genomic and phenotypic characterization of myxoma virus from Great Britain reveals multiple evolutionary pathways distinct from those in Australia".PLOS Pathogens.13(3): e1006252.doi:10.1371/journal.ppat.1006252.PMC5349684.PMID28253375.
- ^Latney, La'Toya (2014)."Encephalitozoon cuniculiin pet rabbits: diagnosis and optimal management ".Veterinary Medicine: Research and Reports.5:169–180.doi:10.2147/VMRR.S49842.PMC7337189.PMID32670857.
- ^Wood, Maggie."Parasites of Rabbits".Chicago Exotics, PC.Archived fromthe originalon 2 March 2013.Retrieved8 April2013.
- ^Boschert, Ken."Internal Parasites of Rabbits".Net Vet.Archivedfrom the original on 2 April 2013.Retrieved8 April2013.
- ^Krempels, Dana."GastroIntestinal Stasis, The Silent Killer".Department of Biology at the University of Miami.Archivedfrom the original on 19 June 2017.Retrieved21 September2017.
- ^"Rabies: Other Wild Animals".Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 15 November 2011.Archivedfrom the original on 20 December 2010.Retrieved20 December2012.
- ^ab"Rabbit hemorrhagic disease".American Veterinary Medical Association.Retrieved7 August2022.
- ^Abrantes, Joana; van der Loo, Wessel; Le Pendu, Jacques; Esteves, Pedro J. (10 February 2012)."Rabbit haemorrhagic disease (RHD) and rabbit haemorrhagic disease virus (RHDV): a review".Veterinary Research.43(1): 12.doi:10.1186/1297-9716-43-12.ISSN1297-9716.PMC3331820.PMID22325049.
- ^Bárcena, Juan; Guerra, Beatriz; Angulo, Iván; González, Julia; Valcárcel, Félix; Mata, Carlos P.; Castón, José R.; Blanco, Esther; Alejo, Alí (24 September 2015)."Comparative analysis of rabbit hemorrhagic disease virus (RHDV) and new RHDV2 virus antigenicity, using specific virus-like particles".Veterinary Research.46(1): 106.doi:10.1186/s13567-015-0245-5.ISSN1297-9716.PMC4581117.PMID26403184.
- ^Ambagala, Aruna; Schwantje, Helen; Laurendeau, Sonja; Snyman, Heindrich; Joseph, Tomy; Pickering, Bradley; Hooper-McGrevy, Kathleen; Babiuk, Shawn; Moffat, Estella; Lamboo, Lindsey; Lung, Oliver; Goolia, Melissa; Pinette, Mathieu; Embury-Hyatt, Carissa (July 2021)."Incursions of rabbit haemorrhagic disease virus 2 in Canada—Clinical, molecular and epidemiological investigation".Transboundary and Emerging Diseases.68(4): 1711–1720.doi:10.1111/tbed.14128.ISSN1865-1674.PMID33915034.
- ^Ramsey, David S.; Patel, Kandarp K.; Campbell, Susan; Hall, Robyn N.; Taggart, Patrick L.; Strive, Tanja (12 May 2023)."Sustained Impact of RHDV2 on Wild Rabbit Populations across Australia Eight Years after Its Initial Detection".Viruses.15(5): 1159.doi:10.3390/v15051159.ISSN1999-4915.PMC10223972.PMID37243245.
- ^"Deadly rabbit disease confirmed in Thurston County; vets urge vaccination".Washington State Department of Agriculture.25 September 2020.Retrieved7 August2022.
- ^Fedriani, J. M.; Palomares, F.; Delibes, M. (1999)."Niche relations among three sympatric Mediterranean carnivores"(PDF).Oecologia.121(1): 138–148.Bibcode:1999Oecol.121..138F.CiteSeerX10.1.1.587.7215.doi:10.1007/s004420050915.JSTOR4222449.PMID28307883.S2CID39202154.Archived(PDF)from the original on 4 March 2016.
- ^Tynes, Valarie V. (2010).Behavior of Exotic Pets.Wiley Blackwell. pp. 70–73.ISBN978-0-8138-0078-3.Archivedfrom the original on 6 May 2016.
- ^Bringmann, Andreas; Syrbe, Steffen; Görner, Katja; Kacza, Johannes; Francke, Mike; Wiedemann, Peter; Reichenbach, Andreas (1 September 2018)."The primate fovea: Structure, function and development".Progress in Retinal and Eye Research.66:49–84.doi:10.1016/j.preteyeres.2018.03.006.ISSN1350-9462.PMID29609042.
- ^Lavaud, Arnold; Soukup, Petr; Martin, Louise; Hartnack, Sonja; Pot, Simon (23 April 2020)."Spectral Domain Optical Coherence Tomography in Awake Rabbits Allows Identification of the Visual Streak, a Comparison with Histology".Translational Vision Science & Technology.9(5): 13.doi:10.1167/tvst.9.5.13.ISSN2164-2591.PMC7401941.PMID32821485.
- ^abVarga 2013,p. 3-4.
- ^Davis, Susan E.; DeMello, Margo (2003).Stories Rabbits Tell: A Natural And Cultural History of A Misunderstood Creature.Lantern Books. p. 27.ISBN978-1-59056-044-0.Archivedfrom the original on 6 May 2016.
- ^Glenday, Craig (2013).Guinness World Records 2014.Guinness World Records Limited. pp.043.ISBN978-1-908843-15-9.
- ^"Cottontail rabbit".Indiana Department of Natural Resources.29 January 2021.Archivedfrom the original on 29 May 2024.
- ^Carey, James R.; Judge, Debra S. (2000).Longevity Records.Monographs on Population Aging. Vol. 8. Odense University Press.ISBN87-7838-539-3.ISSN0909-119X.
- ^"AnAge entry forBrachylagus idahoensis".AnAge: The Animal Ageing and Longevity Database.Human Ageing Genomic Resources.Retrieved8 October2024.
- ^Weigl, Richard (2005).Longevity of Mammals in Captivity; from the Living Collections of the World.Stuttgart: Kleine Senckenberg-Reihe 48.
- ^"AnAge entry forOryctolagus cuniculus".AnAge: The Animal Ageing and Longevity Database.Human Ageing Genomic Resources.Retrieved8 October2024.
- ^Péron, Guillaume; Lemaître, Jean-François; Ronget, Victor; Tidière, Morgane; Gaillard, Jean-Michel (13 September 2019)."Variation in actuarial senescence does not reflect life span variation across mammals".PLoS Biol.17(9): e3000432.doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.3000432.PMC6760812.PMID31518381.
- ^Ge, Deyan; Wen, Zhixin; Xia, Lin; Zhang, Zhaoqun; Erbajeva, Margarita; Huang, Chengming; Yang, Qisen (3 April 2013). Evans, Alistair Robert (ed.)."Evolutionary History of Lagomorphs in Response to Global Environmental Change".PLOS ONE.8(4): e59668.Bibcode:2013PLoSO...859668G.doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0059668.ISSN1932-6203.PMC3616043.PMID23573205.
- ^Sylvilagus aquaticus(swamp rabbit)Archived2013-05-27 at theWayback Machine,Animal Diversity Web,University of Michigan Museum of Zoology.
- ^Southern, H. N. (November 1940). "The ecology and population dynamics of the wild rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus)".Annals of Applied Biology.27(4): 509–526.doi:10.1111/j.1744-7348.1940.tb07522.x.
- ^abMarshall, Larry G.; Webb, S. David; Sepkoski, J. John; Raup, David M. (1982)."Mammalian Evolution and the Great American Interchange".Science.215(4538): 1351–1357.Bibcode:1982Sci...215.1351M.doi:10.1126/science.215.4538.1351.ISSN0036-8075.JSTOR1688046.PMID17753000.
- ^abLong, J.-R.; Qiu, X.-P.; Zeng, F.-T.; Tang, L.-M.; Zhang, Y.-P. (April 2003)."Origin of rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus) in China: evidence from mitochondrial DNA control region sequence analysis".Animal Genetics.34(2): 82–87.doi:10.1046/j.1365-2052.2003.00945.x.ISSN0268-9146.PMID12648090.
- ^Emmons, Louise H.; Feer, Francois (1990).Neotropical Rainforest Mammals: A Field Guide.University of Chicago Press. pp. 227–228.
- ^Cassini, Marcelo H.; Rivas, Luciano (August 2023)."Lack of evidence of significant impact of European rabbits on Patagonian forest regeneration".European Journal of Wildlife Research.69(4): 74.Bibcode:2023EJWR...69...74C.doi:10.1007/s10344-023-01710-1.ISSN1612-4642.
- ^Beischer, DE; Fregly, AR (1962)."Animals and man in space. A chronology and annotated bibliography through the year 1960".US Naval School of Aviation Medicine.ONR TR ACR-64 (AD0272581).Retrieved10 September2024.
- ^Hoffman, Kurt L.; Hernández Decasa, D. M.; Beyer Ruiz, M. E.; González-Mariscal, Gabriela (5 March 2010)."Scent marking by the male domestic rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus) is stimulated by an object's novelty and its specific visual or tactile characteristics ".Behavioural Brain Research.207(2): 360–367.doi:10.1016/j.bbr.2009.10.021.ISSN0166-4328.PMID19857527.S2CID10827948.
- ^"Scent glands".Rabbit Welfare Association & Fund (RWAF).Retrieved10 September2024.
- ^Arteaga, Lourdes; Bautista, Amando; Martínez-Gómez, Margarita; Nicolás, Leticia; Hudson, Robyn (June 2008)."Scent marking, dominance and serum testosterone levels in male domestic rabbits".Physiology & Behavior.94(3): 510–515.doi:10.1016/j.physbeh.2008.03.005.PMID18436270.
- ^Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development; Agriculture and Food Division; Pest and Disease Information Service (PaDIS)."Rabbit control: fumigation".agric.wa.gov.au.Government of Western Australia.Retrieved25 September2021.
- ^Crawford, J S (1969)."History of the state vermin barrier fences, formerly known as rabbit proof fences".Research Reports.Retrieved3 May2023.
- ^Cowan, D. P. (1 December 1984). "The use of ferrets (Mustela furo) in the study and management of the European wild rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus)".Journal of Zoology.204(4): 570–574.doi:10.1111/j.1469-7998.1984.tb02391.x.ISSN1469-7998.
- ^Williams, Kent; Parer, Ian; Coman, Brian; Burley, John; Braysher, Mike (1995).Managing Vertebrate Pests: Rabbits.Canberra: Australian Govt. Pub. Service.ISBN978-0644296236.OCLC153977337.
- ^Williams, Kent; Parer, Ian; Coman, Brian; Burley, John; Braysher, Mike (1995).Managing Vertebrate Pests: Rabbits.Canberra: Australian Govt. Pub. Service.ISBN978-0644296236.OCLC153977337.
- ^CSIRO."Biological control of rabbits".www.csiro.au.Retrieved9 October2024.
- ^Meredith, A (2013). "Viral skin diseases of the rabbit".Veterinary Clinics of North America: Exotic Animal Practice.16(3): 705–714.doi:10.1016/j.cvex.2013.05.010.PMID24018033.
- ^"Feral animals in Australia — Invasive species".Environment.gov.au. 1 February 2010.Archivedfrom the original on 21 July 2010.Retrieved30 August2010.
- ^"Rabbits — The role of government — Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand".Teara.govt.nz. 1 March 2009.Archivedfrom the original on 12 June 2011.Retrieved30 August2010.
- ^Jerez, Sara (23 February 2023).""Es cierto": Experto confirma que conejos y otros animales en llamas sí pueden propagar incendios ".Radio Bío-Bío(in Spanish).Retrieved23 February2023.
- ^abdel Mar Parra, Maria (23 February 2023)."Experto forestal:" Los conejos no son un agente significativo de propagación de incendios "".El Desconcierto(in Spanish).Retrieved23 February2023.
- ^Seuru, S.; Perez, L.; Burke, A. (2023). "Why Were Rabbits Hunted in the Past? Insights from an Agent-Based Model of Human Diet Breadth in Iberia During the Last Glacial Maximum". In Seuru, S.; Albouy, B. (eds.).Modelling Human-Environment Interactions in and beyond Prehistoric Europe. Themes in Contemporary Archaeology.Cham: Springer International Publishing.doi:10.1007/978-3-031-34336-0_7.ISBN978-3-031-34335-3.
- ^Bender, David A. (2003)."game".A Dictionary of Food and Nutrition(2nd ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 2335.doi:10.1093/acref/9780199234875.001.0001.ISBN978-0-19-923487-5.
- ^Southam, Hazel (July 2012). "Natural Selection".Geographical.84(7). Geographical Magazine Ltd.: 40–43 – via EBSCOhost.
- ^Linduska, J. P. (1947)."The Ferret as an Aid to Winter Rabbit Studies".The Journal of Wildlife Management.11(3): 252–255.doi:10.2307/3796283.ISSN0022-541X.JSTOR3796283.
- ^abMcKean, Andrew (October 2008). "Fall's Forgotten Hunt".Outdoor Life.215(9): 58–62 – via EBSCOhost.
- ^Nickens, T. Edward (June 2020). "Snare a Rabbit".Field & Stream.125(2): 53 – via EBSCOhost.
- ^Room, Adrian (2010).Dictionary of Sports and Games Terminology.McFarland. p. 120.ISBN978-0-7864-5757-1.
- ^abOlivia Geng,French Rabbit Heads: The Newest Delicacy in Chinese CuisineArchived14 July 2017 at theWayback Machine.The Wall Street Journal Blog, 13 June 2014
- ^"FAOSTAT".FAO.Retrieved25 October2019.
- ^FAO – The Rabbit – Husbandry, health and production.Archived23 April 2015 at theWayback Machine
- ^Alves, Joel M.; Carneiro, Miguel; Day, Jonathan P.; Welch, John J.; Duckworth, Janine A.; Cox, Tarnya E.; Letnic, Mike; Strive, Tanja; Ferrand, Nuno; Jiggins, Francis M. (30 August 2022)."A single introduction of wild rabbits triggered the biological invasion of Australia".Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.119(35): e2122734119.Bibcode:2022PNAS..11922734A.doi:10.1073/pnas.2122734119.ISSN1091-6490.PMC9436340.PMID35994668.
- ^Alyse Edwards (20 April 2014)."Rabbit meat disappearing from consumers' tables as farmers struggle with spiralling costs".Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
- ^Smith, Ed (4 October 2018).The Borough Market Cookbook: Recipes and stories from a year at the market.Hodder & Stoughton. p. 55.ISBN978-1-4736-7869-9.
- ^'Traditional Moroccan Cooking, Recipes from Fez', by Madame Guinadeau. (Serif, London, 2003).ISBN1-897959-43-5.
- ^"Rabbit: From Farm to Table".USDA Food Safety and Inspection Service.12 January 2006. Archived fromthe originalon 5 July 2008.
- ^ab"Seasonal Incidence of Tularaemia and Sources of Infection".Public Health Reports.42(48): 2948–2951. 1927.ISSN0094-6214.JSTOR4578598.
- ^"Signs and Symptoms of Tularemia".U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.15 May 2023.Retrieved21 August2024.
- ^"Tularemia (Rabbit fever)".Health.utah.gov. 16 June 2003. Archived fromthe originalon 26 May 2010.Retrieved30 August2010.
- ^Penn, R.L. (2014).Francisella tularensis (Tularemia) In J. E. Bennett, R. Dolin, & M. J. Blaser (Eds.), Mandell, Douglas, and Bennett's Principles and Practice of Infectious Diseases(8th ed.). Philadelphia, PA: Churchill Livingstone. pp. 2590–2602.ISBN978-1-4557-4801-3.
- ^Xian, Vivian (2007)."China, Where American Mink Gets Glamour".USDA Foreign Agricultural Service Global Agriculture Information Network.Archivedfrom the original on 20 March 2024.Retrieved20 March2024.
- ^Houdebine, Louis-Marie; Fan, Jianglin (1 June 2009).Rabbit Biotechnology: Rabbit Genomics, Transgenesis, Cloning and Models.Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 68–72.ISBN978-90-481-2226-4.Archivedfrom the original on 26 April 2014.Retrieved26 February2018.
- ^Lebas, F.; Coudert, P.; Rouvier, R.; de Rochambeau, H. (1986)."Production of rabbit skins and angora wool".The rabbit husbandry, health and production.FAO Animal Production and Health. Rome, Italy: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations.Retrieved8 October2024.
- ^abStein, Sadie (31 March 2024)."Our Bunnies, Ourselves".The New York Times Book Review:22 – via Gale General OneFile.
- ^Windling, Terri(2005)."The Symbolism of Rabbits and Hares".Endicott Studio.Archived from the original on 3 May 2012.
{{cite web}}
:CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - ^Harley, Marta Powell (1985)."Rosalind, the Hare, and the Hyena In Shakespeare's" As You Like It "".Shakespeare Quarterly.36(3): 335–337.doi:10.2307/2869713.ISSN0037-3222.JSTOR2869713.
- ^Cross, Gary (13 May 2004)."Holidays and New Rituals of Innocence".The Cute and the Cool.Oxford University Press. pp. 83–120.doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195156669.003.0004.ISBN978-0-19-515666-9.
- ^"Watership Downs".Masterplots II: Juvenile and Young Adult Fiction Series.Vol. 4:Sev–Z, Indexes.Salem Press, Inc. 1991.
- ^Lanes, Selma G. (30 June 1974)."Male Chauvinist Rabbits".The New York Times.Retrieved10 July2016.
- ^Swier, Patricia L. (2013). "REBELLIOUS RABBITS: CHILDHOOD TRAUMA AND THE EMERGENCE OF THE UNCANNY IN TWO SOUTHERN CONE TEXTS".Chasqui(in Spanish).42(1): 166–80 – via EBSCOhost.
- ^Kelly, John (5 April 2016)."The Erotic Rabbits of Easter".Slate.ISSN1091-2339.Retrieved25 September2024.
- ^Fowles, Jib (23 January 1996).Advertising and Popular Culture.SAGE. pp. 1–9.ISBN978-0-8039-5483-0.
- ^Brian Morris,The Power of Animals: An Ethnography,p. 177 (2000).
- ^abMiller, Mary;Karl Taube(1993).The Gods and Symbols of Ancient Mexico and the Maya: An Illustrated Dictionary of Mesoamerican Religion.London:Thames & Hudson.p. 142.ISBN0-500-05068-6.OCLC27667317.
- ^"Nanabozho (Nanabush, Nanabosho, Wenebojo, Nanapush, Manabus)".www.native-languages.org.Archivedfrom the original on 28 March 2013.Retrieved24 September2024.
- ^White, James, ed. (1913). "Nanabozho and the Algonquin Story of the Creation of the World".Handbook of Indians of Canada.pp. 331–335.
- ^Ellis, Bill (1 January 2004).Lucifer Ascending: The Occult in Folklore and Popular Culture.University Press of Kentucky.ISBN978-0-8131-2289-2.
- ^Lemei, Yang (2006)."China's Mid-Autumn Day".Journal of Folklore Research.43(3): 263–270.doi:10.2979/JFR.2006.43.3.263.ISSN0737-7037.JSTOR4640212.
- ^Cammann, Schuyler (1953)."Ming Festival Symbols".Archives of the Chinese Art Society of America.7:66–70.ISSN1945-2926.JSTOR20066955.
- ^Gao, Jinlin; Joh, Yoon-kyoung (30 April 2019)."Chinese Zodiac Culture and the Rhetorical Construction ofA Shu B,C"(PDF).Lanaguage Research.55(1). Seoul National University: 2.doi:10.30961/lr.2019.55.1.55.Archived(PDF)from the original on 6 January 2024.
- ^Ferlus, Michel (2013).The sexagesimal cycle, from China to Southeast Asia.23rd Annual Conference of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society, May 2013, Bangkok, Thailand.
- ^"Year of the Cat OR Year of the Rabbit?".nwasianweekly.com.3 February 2011.Retrieved27 February2018.
- ^Ippo, Mori (30 January 2021)."Object Lesson: Rabbit Pounding the Elixir of Life Under the Moon".New Orleans Museum of Art.
- ^Harley, Timothy (1885). "The Hare in the Moon".Moon Lore.S. Sonnenschein. pp. 60–68.
- ^"Here Comes a Rabbit".National Folk Museum of Korea.19 December 2022.Retrieved24 September2024.
- ^Chapman, Chris; Wei, Zhang; Rasmussen, Peter (August 2004)."The Three Rabbits in China".Adapted from a presentation at the International Conference onGrottoesResearch.Dunhuang China.Retrieved25 April2012.
- ^Evans, Edward Payson (1896).Animal Symbolism in Ecclesiastical Architecture.H. Holt. p. 239.
- ^Fox-Davies, A.C. (1978)A Complete Guide to Heraldry(New York: Bonanza Books) p. 214.ISBN1-60239-001-0;ISBN978-1-60239-001-0.
- ^Gilad, Elon (13 June 2013)."Word of the Day Shafan: Don't Turn Yourself Into a Hyrax!".Haaretz.
- ^M'Baye, Babacar(2009).The Trickster Comes West: Pan-African Influence in Early Black Diasporan Narratives.Univ. Press of Mississippi. pp. 13–18.ISBN978-1-60473-352-5.
- ^Brasch, Walter M. (2000).Brer Rabbit, Uncle Remus, and the 'Cornfield Journalist': The Tale of Joel Chandler Harris.Mercer University Press. pp. 74, 275.ISBN978-0-86554-696-7.
- ^Adamson, Joe (1990).Bugs Bunny: 50 Years and Only One Grey Hare.Henry Holt.ISBN0-8050-1855-7.
- ^Susanin, Timothy S.; Miller, Diane Disney (7 April 2011).Walt Before Mickey: Disney's Early Years, 1919–1928.Univ. Press of Mississippi.ISBN978-1-60473-960-2.Retrieved4 September2012.
- ^"Wallace and Gromit spook island".BBC News.7 October 2005.Retrieved25 August2022.
- ^Mayntz, Melissa (26 April 2019)."On the 1st Of The Month Say" Rabbit Rabbit "for Good luck!".Farmers' Almanac – Plan Your Day. Grow Your Life.Retrieved27 April2023.
- ^Friedman, Maurice (1 May 1939)."The Assay of Gonadotropic Extracts in the Post-Partum Rabbit11".Endocrinology.24(5): 617–625.doi:10.1210/endo-24-5-617.
- ^Bittel, Jason (19 February 2022)."Think you know what bunnies and bears eat? Their diets may surprise you".Washington Post.ISSN0190-8286.Retrieved10 March2024.
- ^Rioja-Lang, Fiona; Bacon, Heather; Connor, Melanie; Dwyer, Cathy Mary (2019)."Rabbit welfare: determining priority welfare issues for pet rabbits using a modified Delphi method".Veterinary Record Open.6(1): e000363.doi:10.1136/vetreco-2019-000363.ISSN2399-2050.PMC6924855.PMID31903189.
- ^George, Amber E.; Schatz, J. L. (27 April 2016).Screening the Nonhuman: Representations of Animal Others in the Media.Lexington Books.ISBN978-1-4985-1375-3.
Sources used
- Alves, Paulo C.; Ferrand, Nuno; Hackländer, Klaus, eds. (2008).Lagomorph Biology.Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg.doi:10.1007/978-3-540-72446-9.ISBN978-3-540-72445-2.
- Angerbjörn, Anders; Schai-Braun, Stéphanie Claire (2023)."Mountain Hare Lepus timidus Linnaeus, 1758".In Hackländer, Klaus; Alves, Paulo C. (eds.).Primates and Lagomorpha.Handbook of the Mammals of Europe. Cham: Springer International Publishing.doi:10.1007/978-3-030-34043-8_12.ISBN978-3-030-34042-1.
- Delibes-Mateos, Miguel; Rödel, Heiko G.; Rouco, Carlos; Alves, Paulo C.; Carneiro, Miguel; Villafuerte, Rafael (2023)."European Rabbit Oryctolagus cuniculus (Linnaeus, 1758)".In Hackländer, Klaus; Alves, Paulo C. (eds.).Primates and Lagomorpha.Handbook of the Mammals of Europe. Cham: Springer International Publishing.doi:10.1007/978-3-030-34043-8_13.ISBN978-3-030-34042-1.
- Nowak, Ronald M. (1999).Walker's mammals of the world.Vol. 2 (6th ed.). Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.ISBN978-0-8018-5789-8.
- Smith, David G.; Schenk, Michael P. (2019).A dissection guide & atlas to the rabbit.Morton.ISBN978-1-61731-937-2.OCLC1084742187.
- Varga, M. (2013)."Rabbit Basic Science".Textbook of Rabbit Medicine:3–108.doi:10.1016/B978-0-7020-4979-8.00001-7.ISBN978-0-7020-4979-8.PMC7158370.