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European rabbit

The European rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus) or coney[4] is a species of rabbit native to the Iberian Peninsula (Spain, Portugal and Andorra), western France, and the northern Atlas Mountains in northwest Africa.[5] It has been widely introduced elsewhere, often with devastating effects on local biodiversity. Its decline in its native range due to myxomatosis, rabbit hemorrhagic disease, overhunting and habitat loss has caused the decline of the Iberian lynx (Lynx pardinus) and Spanish imperial eagle (Aquila adalberti). It is known as an invasive species because it has been introduced to countries on all continents with the exception of Antarctica, and has caused many problems within the environment and ecosystems; in particular, European rabbits in Australia have had a devastating impact, due in part to the lack of natural predators there.

European rabbit
Temporal range: Pleistocene–Holocene
Pleistocene to recent[2]
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Lagomorpha
Family: Leporidae
Genus: Oryctolagus
Species:
O. cuniculus[1]
Binomial name
Oryctolagus cuniculus[1]
Range map:
  Native
  Introduced
Synonyms

Lepus cuniculus Linnaeus, 1758

The European rabbit is well known for digging networks of burrows, called warrens, where it spends most of its time when not feeding. Unlike the related hares (Lepus spp.), rabbits are altricial, the young being born blind and furless, in a fur-lined nest in the warren, and they are totally dependent upon their mothers. Much of the modern research into wild rabbit behaviour was carried out in the 1960s by two research centres. One was the naturalist Ronald Lockley, who maintained a number of large enclosures for wild rabbit colonies, with observation facilities at Orielton, in Pembrokeshire, Wales. Apart from publishing a number of scientific papers, he popularised his findings in a book The Private Life of the Rabbit, which is credited by Richard Adams as having played a key role in his gaining "a knowledge of rabbits and their ways" that informed his novel Watership Down. The other group was the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) in Australia, where numerous studies of the social behavior of wild rabbits were performed. Since the onset of myxomatosis, and the decline of the significance of the rabbit as an agricultural pest, few large-scale studies have been performed and many aspects of rabbit behaviour are still poorly understood.

Naming and etymology edit

Because of its non-British origin, the species does not have native names in English or Celtic, with the usual terms "cony" and "rabbit" being foreign loanwords. "Rabbit" is also pronounced as rabbidge, rabbert (North Devon) and rappit (Cheshire and Lancashire). More archaic spellings include rabbette (15th-16th centuries), rabet (15th-17th centuries), rabbet (16th-18th centuries), rabatte (16th century), rabytt (17th century) and rabit (18th century). The root word is the Walloon rabett, which was once commonly used in Liège. Rabett itself is derived from the Middle Dutch robbe, with the addition of the suffix -ett.[6]

The term "cony" or "coney" antedates "rabbit", and first occurred during the 13th century to refer to the animal's pelt. Later, "cony" referred to the adult animal, while "rabbit" referred to the young. The root of "cony" is the old French connil or counil, of which the Norman plural was coniz, and later conis.[citation needed] Connil comes from the Latin cuniculus.[7] Its forerunner is the Greek κόνικλος. The origin of κόνικλος itself is unclear: Ælian, who lived during the third century, linked the word to Celtiberian and later authors relate it to its Basque name unchi; Varo and Pliny connected it to cuneus, which refers to a wedge, thus making reference to the animal's digging ability.[6]

The species' dwelling place is termed a warren or cony-garth. "Warren" comes from the Old English wareine, itself derived from the Old French warenne, varenne, or garenne. The root word is the Low Latin warenna, which originally signified a preserve in general, only to be later used to refer specifically to an enclosure set apart for rabbits and hares.[8] "Cony-garth" derives from the Middle English conygerthe, which may be a compound of connynge+erthe (cony+earth). The term stems from the Old French conniniere or coninyere, and later conilliere. The root word is the Low Latin cunicularia, the feminine form of the adjective cunicularius, which pertains to the rabbit.[6]

Taxonomy edit

Originally assigned to the genus Lepus, the European rabbit was consigned to its own genus in 1874 on account of its altricial young, its burrowing habits, and numerous skeletal characters.[9] It is superficially similar to the North American cottontails (Sylvilagus) in that they are born blind and naked, have white flesh, and little sexual dimorphism. However, they differ in skull characteristics, and cottontails do not construct their own burrows as the European rabbit does.[10] Molecular studies confirm that the resemblance between the two is due to convergent evolution, and that the European rabbit's closest relatives are the hispid hare, the riverine rabbit, and the Amami rabbit.[11]

The cladogram is from Matthee et al., 2004, based on nuclear and mitochondrial gene analysis.[12]

Leporidae

Nesolagus (striped rabbits)

Poelagus (Bunyoro rabbit)

Pronolagus (red rock hares)

Romerolagus (volcano rabbit)

Sylvilagus (cottontails)  

Brachylagus (pygmy rabbit)

Caprolagus (hispid hare)

Oryctolagus (European rabbit)  

Bunolagus (riverine rabbit)

Pentalagus (Amami rabbit)

Lepus (hares)  

Subspecies edit

As of 2005,[13] six subspecies are recognised by MSW3. Genetic studies undertaken in 2008, however, indicate only two subspecies, O. c. algirus and O. c. cuniculus, with a hybrid zone connecting the two populations in central Iberia.[14]

Fossil record edit

The oldest known fossils attributed to the modern European rabbit species are around 0.5 Ma (0.50 million yr) old (Middle Pleistocene).[19] Palaeoichnological evidence exists of European rabbits burrowing in and disturbing what are likely Neanderthal burial sites.[20]

Description edit

 
 
Melanistic rabbits are more common where ground predators are lacking, such as on islands or in large enclosures.[21]

The European rabbit is smaller than the European hare and mountain hare, and lacks black ear tips, as well as having proportionately shorter legs.[22] An adult European rabbit can measure 40 cm (16 in) in length, and weigh 1,200–2,000 g (2.6–4.4 lb). The hind foot measures 8.5–10 cm (3.3–3.9 in) in length, while the ears are 6.5–7.5 cm (2.6–3.0 in) long from the occiput.[23]

Size and weight vary according to food and habitat quality, with rabbits living on light soil with nothing but grass to feed on being noticeably smaller than specimens living on highly cultivated farmlands with plenty of roots and clover. Pure European rabbits weighing 5 kg (11 lb) and upwards are uncommon, but are occasionally reported. One large specimen, caught in February 1890 in Lichfield, was weighed at 2.8 kg (6 lb 2 oz).[24] Unlike the brown hare, the male European rabbit is more heavily built than the female.[25] The penis is short, and lacks a baculum and true glans.[9]

The fur of the European rabbit is generally greyish-brown, but this is subject to much variation. The guard hairs are banded brown and black, or grey, while the nape of the neck and scrotum are reddish. The chest patch is brown, while the rest of the underparts are white or grey. A white star shape is often present on kits' foreheads, but rarely occurs in adults. The whiskers are long and black, and the feet are fully furred and buff-coloured.[9] The tail has a white underside, which becomes prominent when escaping danger. This may act as a signal for other rabbits to run.[24]

Moulting occurs once a year, beginning in March on the face and spreading over the back. The underfur is completely replaced by October–November.[9] The European rabbit exhibits great variation in colour, from light sandy, to dark grey and completely black. Such variation depends largely on the amount of guard hairs relative to regular pelage. Melanists are not uncommon in mainland Europe, though albinoes are rare.[21]

Life history and behaviour edit

 
Maternal Instinct (circa 1898), G. E. Lodge.
 
Entrances to a warren

Social and territorial behaviours edit

The European rabbit lives in warrens that contain 2–10 other individuals living in smaller groups to ensure greater breeding success.[26] Territoriality and aggression contribute greatly to the rabbits' maturation process, and help ensure survival of the population.[27] Females tend to be more territorial than males, although the areas most frequented by females are not defended.[28] Territories are marked with dung hills.[29] The size of the species' home range varies according to habitat, food, shelter, cover from predators, and breeding sites, though it is generally small, encompassing about 0.3–0.7 ha (0.7–1.7 acres). Except during times of low rabbit density and abundance of high-quality food, male ranges tend to be larger than those held by females. The European rabbit rarely strays far from its burrow; when feeding on cultivated fields, it typically only moves 25 m (82 ft) away from its burrow, and rarely 50 m (160 ft). It may, however, move as far as 500 m (1,600 ft) after an abrupt change in environment, such as a harvest. This behaviour may be an antipredator adaptation, as rabbits in areas where predators are under rigorous control may move three times further from their burrows than those in areas without predator management.[30]

The European rabbit is a gregarious animal, which lives in stable social groups centred around females and sharing access to one or more burrow systems. Social structures tend to be looser in areas where burrow construction is relatively easy. Dominance hierarchies exist in parallel for both bucks and does. Among bucks, status is determined through access to does, with dominant bucks siring the majority of the colony's offspring. The dominant does have priority access to the best nesting sites, with competition over such sites often leading to serious injury or death. Subordinate does, particularly in large colonies, typically resort to using single-entrance breeding spots far from the main warren, thus making themselves vulnerable to fox or badger predation.[30]

Reproduction and development edit

In the European rabbit's mating system, dominant bucks exhibit polygyny, whereas lower-status individuals (both bucks and does) often form monogamous breeding relationships.[citation needed] Rabbits signal their readiness to copulate by marking other animals and inanimate objects with an odoriferous substance secreted though a chin gland, in a process known as "chinning".[31] Though male European rabbits may sometimes be amicable with one another, fierce fights can erupt among bucks during the breeding season,[32] typically January to August. A succession of litters (usually three to seven kittens each) are produced, but in overpopulated areas, pregnant does may lose all their embryos through intrauterine resorption.[33] Shortly before giving birth, the doe constructs a separate burrow known as a "stop" or "stab", generally in an open field away from the main warren. These breeding burrows are typically a few feet long and are lined with grass and moss, as well as fur plucked from the doe's belly. The breeding burrow protects the kits from adult bucks and predators.[34]

The gestation period of the European rabbit is 30 days,[35] with the sex ratio of male to female kits tending to be 1:1. Greater maternal investment over male offspring may result in higher birth weights for bucks.[33] Kits born to the dominant buck and doe—which enjoy better nesting and feeding grounds—tend to grow larger and stronger and become more dominant than those born to subordinate rabbits.[36] Not uncommonly, European rabbits mate again immediately after giving birth, with some specimens having been observed to nurse previous young whilst pregnant.[35]

Female European rabbits nurse their kits once a night, for only a few minutes. After suckling is complete, the doe seals the entrance to the stop with soil and vegetation. In its native Iberian and southern French range, European rabbit young have a growth rate of 5 g (0.18 oz) per day, though such kittens in non-native ranges may grow 10 g (0.35 oz) per day. Weight at birth is 30–35 g (1.1–1.2 oz) and increases to 150–200 g (5.3–7.1 oz) by 21–25 days, during the weaning period.[33] European rabbit kits are born blind, deaf, and nearly naked. The ears do not gain the power of motion until 10 days of age, and can be erected after 13. The eyes open 11 days after birth.[35] At 18 days, the kittens begin to leave the burrow. Sexual maturity in bucks is attained at 4 months, while does can begin to breed at 3-5 months.[33]

Burrowing behaviour edit

The European rabbit's burrows occur mostly on slopes and banks, where drainage is more efficient. The burrow entrances are typically 10–50 cm (4–20 in) in diameter,[22] and are easily recognisable by the bare earth at their mouths. Vegetation growth is prevented by the constant passing and repassing of the resident rabbits. Big burrows are complex excavations which may descend to depths of several feet. They are not constructed on any specified plan, and appear to be enlarged or improved as a result of the promiscuous activity of several generations. Digging is done by pulling the soil backwards with the fore feet and throwing it between the hind legs, which scatter the material with kicking motions. While most burrows are dug from the outside, some warrens feature holes dug from the inside, which act as emergency exits when escaping from predators below ground. These holes usually descend perpendicularly to 1–1.2 m (3–4 ft), and their mouths lack the bare-earth characteristic of burrow entrances. While kits sleep in chambers lined with grass and fur, adults sleep on the bare earth, likely to escape dampness, with warmth being secured by huddling.[37] Although both sexes dig, does do so more skillfully, and for longer periods.[38]

Communication edit

The European rabbit is a relatively quiet animal, though it has at least two vocalisations. The best-known is a high treble scream or squeal.[39] This distress call has been likened to the cry of a piglet.[40] This sound is uttered when in extreme distress, such as being caught by a predator or trap.[39] During the spring, bucks express contentment by emitting grunting sounds when approaching other rabbits. These grunts are similar to shrill hiccups, and are emitted with the mouth closed. Aggression is expressed with a low growl.[40]

Ecology edit

 
Attacked by a stoat, Northumberland, UK
 
Myxomatosis

Habitat edit

The European rabbit's ideal habitat consists of short grasslands with secure refuge (such as burrows, boulders, hedgerows, scrub, and woodland) near feeding areas. It may dwell up to treeline, as long as the land is well-drained and shelter is available. The size and distribution of its burrow systems depend on the type of soil present. In areas with loose soil, it selects sites with supporting structures, such as tree roots or shrubs to prevent burrow collapse. Warrens tend to be larger and have more interconnected tunnels in areas with chalk than those in sand. In large coniferous plantations, the species only occurs on peripheral areas and along fire breaks and rides.[41]

Diet edit

The European rabbit eats a wide variety of herbage, especially grasses, favouring the young, succulent leaves and shoots of the most nutritious species, particularly fescues. In mixed cultivated areas, winter wheat is preferred over maize and dicotyledons. During the summer, the European rabbit feeds on the shortest, and therefore less nutritious grass swards, thus indicating that grazing grounds are selected through antipredator considerations rather than maximising food intake. In times of scarcity, the rabbit increases its food intake, selecting the parts of the plant with the highest nitrogen content.[42] Hungry rabbits in winter may resort to eating tree bark. Blackberries are also eaten, and captive-bred European rabbits have been fed on fodder consisting of furze and acorns, which can lead to considerable weight gain.[43] The European rabbit is a less fussy eater than the brown hare. When eating root vegetables, the rabbit eats them whole, while the hare tends to leave the peel.[44] Depending on the body's fat and protein reserves, the species can survive without food in winter for about 2–8 days.[42] Although herbivorous, cases are known of rabbits eating snails.[43]

Like other leporids, the European rabbit produces soft, mucus-covered faecal pellets, which are ingested directly from the anus.[42] The soft pellets are produced posterior to the colon in the hind gut soon after the excretion of hard pellets and the stomach begins to fill with newly grazed food. The soft pellets are filled with protein-rich bacteria, and pass down to the rectum in glossy clusters. The rabbit swallows them whole, without perforating the enveloping membrane.[45]

Predators edit

The European rabbit is prey to many different predatory species. Foxes, dingoes, wolves, lynxes, wolverines, and dogs kill both adult and young rabbits by stalking and surprising them in the open, but relatively few rabbits are caught this way, as they can quickly rush back to cover with a burst of speed.[46] Further, evidence from a study in Spain suggests they may avoid areas where the recent scat of predators which have eaten rabbit is detected.[47] Both foxes and badgers dig out kittens from shallow burrows, with the latter predators being too slow to catch adult rabbits. Both wild and domestic cats can stalk and leap upon rabbits, particularly young specimens leaving their burrows for the first time.[46] Wildcats take rabbits according to availability; in eastern Scotland, where rabbits are abundant, they can make up over 90% of the wildcats' diet.[23] Most domestic cats are incapable of killing healthy, full-grown adults, but will take weak and diseased ones. Does can be fiercely protective of their kits, having been observed to chase away large cats and mustelids, including ferrets, stoats, and weasels. However, rabbits typically run from mustelids, and may fear them innately. Cases are known of rabbits becoming paralysed with fear and dying when pursued by stoats or weasels, even when rescued unharmed.[46]

The European rabbit makes up 85% of the polecat's diet, and its availability is important to the success of breeding female mink.[23] Brown rats can be a serious threat to kittens, as they will reside in rabbit burrows during the summer, and attack them in groups.[48][49] Although many birds of prey are capable of killing rabbits, few are strong enough to carry them. Large species, such as golden and sea eagles, may carry rabbits back to their nests, while small eagles, buzzards, and harriers struggle to do so. Hawks and owls typically only carry off very small kits.[46]

Diseases and parasites edit

The European rabbit is the only species fatally attacked by myxomatosis. The most lethal strain has a five-day incubation period, after which the eyelids swell, with the inflammation quickly spreading to the base of the ears, the forehead, and nose. At the same time, the anal and genital areas also swell. During the last stages of the disease, the swellings discharge a fluid rich in viral material, with death usually following on the 11th-12th day of infection.[50] In Britain, the primary carrier of myxomatosis is the flea Spilopsyllus cuniculi, while in Australia it is mosquitoes.

Rabbit haemorrhagic disease (RHD), also known as viral haemorrhagic disease or rabbit calicivirus disease in Australia, is specific to the European rabbit, and causes lesions of acute necrotising hepatitis, disseminated intravascular coagulation, and haemorrhaging, mainly in the lungs. Susceptible specimens may die within 30 hours of infection. Most rabbits in the UK are immune to RHD, due to exposure to a weaker strain.[51][52]

Human relationships with rabbits edit

 
Two rabbits on the steps of Finnish National Opera in Helsinki

Recent research has shown that all European rabbits carry common genetic markers and descend from one of two maternal lines. These lines originated between 12,000 and 6.5 million years ago when glaciers isolated two herds, one on the Iberian Peninsula and the other in Southern France. Humans likely began hunting rabbits as a food source, but further research needs to be done to verify this. Little comprehensive evidence of the relationship of humans with European rabbits is documented until the medieval period.[53]

Humans' relationship with the European rabbit was first recorded by the Phoenicians prior to 1000 BC, when they termed the Iberian Peninsula i-Shaphan-ím (literally, the land of the hyraxes). This phrase closely resembles related modern Hebrew: I (אי) meaning island and shafan (שפן) meaning hyrax, plural shfaním (שפנים). Phoenicians called the local rabbits 'hyraxes' because rabbits resemble hyraxes in some ways, and hyraxes are native to Phoenicia, unlike rabbits. Hyraxes, like rabbits, are not rodents. One theory states that the Romans converted the phrase i-Shaphan-ím, with influence from the Greek Spania, to its Latin form, Hispania, which evolved in all the Iberian languages - into Castilian España, Portuguese Espanha, Catalan Espanya (English "Spain"), and such other variations in modern languages. Different views have been voiced on the precise meaning of shafan, but the balance of opinion appears to indicate that the hyrax is indeed the intended meaning.[54]

Like the Phoenicians, neither the later Greek nor Roman colonizers had a specific name for the rabbit, because the species is not native to Greece and Italy (though it is present there nowadays). They commonly called it "small hare" and "small digging hare", in contrast to the European hare, which is larger and does not make burrows. Catullus used the name cuniculus (a latinization of the Iberian word kiniklos[55] and the etymological origin of the Castilian name conejo, Portuguese coelho and Catalan conill,[56] and the old English name, coney[57]), and referenced its abundance in Celtiberia by calling this region cuniculosa, i.e. rabbit-ridden.[58][59]

The European rabbit is the only rabbit species that has been domesticated and all 305 global rabbit breeds— from Netherland Dwarf to Flemish Giant— are descendants of the European rabbit. Rabbits are an example of an animal that can be treated as a food, a pet, or a pest by different members of the same culture. In some urban areas, infestations of feral European rabbits (descended from pets) have become a problem. Helsinki, for example, host to one of the northernmost populations of the species, had an estimated 2,500 European rabbits at the end of 2006, doubling to 5,000 by autumn 2007.[60] In Iceland, populations of O. cuniculus are found in urban Reykjavík as well as in the Vestmannaeyjar archipelago. In Finland, the introduced European rabbit vies with the native lagomorphs: the European hare and the mountain hare.

As an introduced species edit

 
Feral rabbits on the island of Ōkunoshima: The European rabbit was introduced to the island following World War II as part of the development of a park, and established a self-sustaining population in the latter half of the 20th century.

The European rabbit has been introduced as an exotic species into several environments, often with harmful results to vegetation and local wildlife, making it an invasive species. The first known mention of the rabbit as an invasive species (and possibly the first documented instance of an invasive species ever) was made in regard to the introduction of the rabbit to the Balearic Islands after the Roman conquest of the first century BCE. According to both Strabo and Pliny the Elder, the multiplying rabbits caused famines by destroying crop yields and even collapsed trees and houses with their burrowing. The inhabitants petitioned Augustus for help, who sent troops to curb the rabbit population with the help of ferrets.[58][59]

Other locations where the European rabbit was introduced include Great Britain; two of the Hawaiian Islands (Laysan Island in 1903 and Lisianski Island); Oceania's Macquarie Island; Washington's Smith Island and San Juan Island (around 1900 and later spreading to the other San Juan Islands); several islands off the coast of Southern Africa (including Robben Island); and Australia and New Zealand.[citation needed] The two accounts over the introduction of rabbits in Ukraine are conflicting. One holds that the species was brought there in the early 20th century by Austrian nobleman Graf Malokhovsky, who released them on his estate near the Khadzhibey Estuary, while another holds that rabbits were first brought to Kherson from Switzerland in 1894-1895 by landowner Pinkovsky.[61]

In the British Isles edit

The European rabbit is widespread in both Great Britain, Ireland, and most islands, except for Isles of Scilly, Rùm, Tiree, and some small Scottish islands, such as Gunna, Sanday, and most of the Treshnish Isles.[62] It was likely first brought to Britain by the Normans after the 1066 conquest of England, as no pre-Norman British allusions to the animal have been found. The rabbit was nonetheless scarce or absent throughout most of England a short time afterwards, as warrens are not mentioned in the Domesday Book or any other 11th-century documents. Rabbits became well known, but not necessarily accepted members of British fauna between the 12th and 13th centuries, with the first real evidence of their presence consisting of a number of bones from the midden of Rayleigh Castle, which was occupied from the 11th-13th centuries. The first references to rabbits in Ireland occur roughly at the same time as English ones, thus indicating another Norman introduction. They had become plentiful, probably at a local level, by the 13th century, as indicated by an inquisition of Lundy Island made in 1274 describing how 2,000 rabbits were caught annually. Subsequent allusions in official documents became more frequent, with the species later becoming an important food item in feasts.[63]

Increases in truly wild populations occurred slowly, primarily in the coastal areas and lowland heaths of Breckland and Norfolk. Notable population increases occurred after 1750, when changes in agricultural practices created favourable habitat, and increasing interest in game management resulted in intensive predator control campaigns.[41] Although now common in the Scottish lowlands, the species was little known in Scotland before the 19th century. Until then, it was confined to portions of the Edinburgh district at least as far back as the 16th century, certain islands and the coastal sand dunes of the Scottish mainland. Although unknown in Caithness in 1743, the species became well established there by 1793.[63] Myxomatosis entered Britain from France in 1953, and reached Ireland by 1954,[51] prompting the RSPB to set up "mercy squads" meant to euthanise myxomatous rabbits.[64] Major myxomatosis outbreaks still occur in Britain, peaking twice annually in spring and especially in the late summer or autumn periods, though immunity has reduced the mortality rate from 99% to 5-33%.[51]

Between 1996 and 2018, rabbit numbers fell by 88% in the east Midlands, 83% in Scotland, and 43% across the whole of the UK. Numbers are still falling (in 2021). Pip Mountjoy, Shifting Sands project manager at Natural England said, "They (rabbits) are actually an endangered species in their native region on the Iberian peninsula. It is surprising for people that rabbits are important in some ecosystems. We think of them as a pest but in Britain they are a keystone species – they act as landscape managers and a lot of other species rely on them." The Shifting Sands project aims to encourage landowners to create safe habitats for rabbits, consisting of piles of branches placed near existing rabbit warrens. Species that depend in rabbits' grazing habits include purple milk vetch, rare spring sedge, spring speedwell, prostrate perennial knawel, caterpillars of the lunar yellow underwing moth, stone curlew, and the large blue butterfly.[65]

In Australia edit

 
A feral rabbit on a farm in Victoria (Australia)

Twenty-four specimens of the European rabbit were introduced to Australia in 1859 by estate owner Thomas Austin in Victoria. Their descendants multiplied and spread throughout the country due to the lack of natural predators, a conducive habitat (provided by widespread farming), and the mild Australian winters that allowed year-round breeding. Australia's native equivalent, the bilby, was quickly pushed out by the invasive rabbit. (The bilbies are endangered, but are now making a comeback due to government protection.) Between 1901 and 1907, Australia built an immense "rabbit-proof fence" to halt the westward expansion of the infestation. The European rabbit, however, can not only jump very high, but also burrow underground, making fencing essentially futile.

During the 1950s, the intentional introduction of a virus that causes myxomatosis provided some relief in Australia, but not in New Zealand, where the insect vectors necessary for the spread of the disease were not present. Myxomatosis can also infect pet rabbits (the same species). Today's remaining feral rabbits in Australia are largely immune to myxomatosis. A second deadly rabbit virus, rabbit hemorrhagic disease (RHD), has been cleared in Australia as a biological control agent and has already killed millions of the European rabbits there. RHD was also introduced—illegally— in New Zealand with less success due to improper timing.

In Chile edit

The exact date on which the European rabbit was introduced into Chile is unknown, though the first references to it occur during the mid-18th century. By the 19th century, several authors referred to the presence of both rabbits and rabbit hutches in central Chile. The importation and breeding of rabbits was encouraged by the state, as rabbits were seen as cheap sources of food for peasants. Whether or not their escape into the wild was intentional is unknown, but warnings over the dangers of feral rabbits were raised during the early 20th century, and the species had propagated dramatically by the late 1920s in central Chile, Tierra del Fuego, and the Juan Fernández Islands. In the 1930s, the state sought to tackle the rabbit problem by banning fox hunting, though it was later discovered that indigenous South American foxes rarely preyed on rabbits, preferring native species. In modern times, the European rabbit problem has not been resolved definitively, though a deliberate outbreak of myxomatosis in Tierra del Fuego successfully reduced local rabbit populations. The species remains a problem in central Chile and on Juan Fernández, despite international financing.[66]

Domesticated rabbits edit

The European rabbit is the only rabbit to be widely domesticated, for food or as a pet. It was first widely kept in ancient Rome, where fetal rabbits were known as laurices and considered a delicacy, and has been refined into a wide variety of breeds during and since the Middle Ages.

Domesticated rabbits have mostly been bred to be much larger than wild rabbits, though selective breeding has produced a range of sizes from "dwarf" to "giant", which are kept as food animals and pets across the world. They have as much color variation among themselves as other livestock and pet animals. Their fur is prized for its softness; today, Angora rabbits are raised for their long, soft fur, which is often spun into yarn. Other breeds are raised for the fur industry, particularly the Rex, which has a smooth, velvet-like coat and occurs in a wide variety of colors and sizes.

Meat and fur edit

In the United Kingdom, rabbit was a popular food source for the poorer classes. Among wild rabbits, those native to Spain were reputed to have the highest meat quality, followed by those in the Ardennes. As rabbits hold very little fat, they were hardly ever roasted, being instead boiled, fried, or stewed.[67]

The pelt of the rabbit is heavier and more durable than the hare's.[68] Marshall calculated that the value of the skin in proportion to the carcass was greater than that of the sheep and ox.[69] Its fur is primarily used for felting or hats. It is also dyed or clipped, and sold as imitations of more valuable furbearers, such as fur seal. Although cheap and easily acquired, rabbit fur has little durability.[70]

Conservation status edit

Though the European rabbit thrives in many of the locations where it was introduced, in its native Iberia, populations are dwindling. In 2005, the Portuguese Institute for Nature Conservation and Forests classified O. cuniculus in Portugal as "near threatened",[71] while in 2006, Spanish authorities (SECEM) reclassified it in Spain as "vulnerable".[72] In 2018, the International Union for Conservation of Nature reclassified O. cuniculus in Spain, Portugal, and France as "endangered", due to the extent of recent declines. Worldwide, the species is also endangered.[3]

See also edit

  • Cuniculture, on the practice of breeding and raising the domesticated version of the European rabbit
  • List of breeds of the domesticated version of the European rabbit

References edit

  1. ^ Hoffman, R.S.; Smith, A.T. (2005). "Order Lagomorpha". In Wilson, D.E.; Reeder, D.M (eds.). Mammal Species of the World: A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference (3rd ed.). Johns Hopkins University Press. pp. 205–206. ISBN 978-0-8018-8221-0. OCLC 62265494.
  2. ^ "Fossilworks: Oryctolagus cuniculus".
  3. ^ a b Villafuerte, R. & Delibes-Mateos, M. (2020) [errata version of 2019 assessment]. "Oryctolagus cuniculus". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2019: e.T41291A170619657. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2019-3.RLTS.T41291A170619657.en. Retrieved 17 February 2022.
  4. ^ "coney, n.1". OED Online. Oxford University Press. 1 March 2018. Retrieved 25 April 2018.
  5. ^ "ADW: Oryctolagus cuniculus: INFORMATION". Animal Diversity Web.
  6. ^ a b c Barrett-Hamilton, Hinton & Wilson 1910, pp. 177–179
  7. ^ CNRTL 2012, connil.
  8. ^ Harting & Shand 1898, pp. 51–52
  9. ^ a b c d Harris & Yalden 2008, pp. 203
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Bibliography edit

  • Barrett-Hamilton, Gerald Edwin Hamilton; Hinton, Martin A. C.; Wilson, Edward Adrian (1910). A history of British mammals, v. 2; pt. 2. London : Gurney and Jackson.
  • "Centre National de Ressources Textuelles et Lexicales" [National Center of Textual and Lexical Resources]. CNRTL.fr (in French). 2012.
  • Harris, Stephen; Yalden, Derek (2008). Mammals of the British Isles. Mammal Society; 4th Revised edition. ISBN 978-0-906282-65-6.
  • Harting, James Edmund; Shand, A. I. (1898). The rabbit; with a chapter on Cookery. London, Longmans.
  • Lockley, R. M. (1976). The Private Life of the Rabbit. Readers Union Group of Book Clubs.
  • Ognev, Sergei Ivanovich (1962). Mammals of Eastern Europe and Northern Asia, Vol. 4. Israel Program for Scientific Translations.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Oryctolagus cuniculus at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Data related to Oryctolagus cuniculus at Wikispecies

european, rabbit, this, article, primarily, concerned, with, wild, animal, detailed, information, domesticated, varieties, domestic, rabbit, general, information, rabbit, species, rabbit, oryctolagus, cuniculus, coney, species, rabbit, native, iberian, peninsu. This article is primarily concerned with the wild animal For detailed information on domesticated varieties see Domestic rabbit For general information on all rabbit species see Rabbit The European rabbit Oryctolagus cuniculus or coney 4 is a species of rabbit native to the Iberian Peninsula Spain Portugal and Andorra western France and the northern Atlas Mountains in northwest Africa 5 It has been widely introduced elsewhere often with devastating effects on local biodiversity Its decline in its native range due to myxomatosis rabbit hemorrhagic disease overhunting and habitat loss has caused the decline of the Iberian lynx Lynx pardinus and Spanish imperial eagle Aquila adalberti It is known as an invasive species because it has been introduced to countries on all continents with the exception of Antarctica and has caused many problems within the environment and ecosystems in particular European rabbits in Australia have had a devastating impact due in part to the lack of natural predators there European rabbitTemporal range Pleistocene Holocene PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N Pleistocene to recent 2 source source source Conservation status Endangered IUCN 3 1 3 Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Class Mammalia Order Lagomorpha Family Leporidae Genus Oryctolagus Species O cuniculus 1 Binomial name Oryctolagus cuniculus 1 Linnaeus 1758 Range map Native Introduced Synonyms Lepus cuniculus Linnaeus 1758 The European rabbit is well known for digging networks of burrows called warrens where it spends most of its time when not feeding Unlike the related hares Lepus spp rabbits are altricial the young being born blind and furless in a fur lined nest in the warren and they are totally dependent upon their mothers Much of the modern research into wild rabbit behaviour was carried out in the 1960s by two research centres One was the naturalist Ronald Lockley who maintained a number of large enclosures for wild rabbit colonies with observation facilities at Orielton in Pembrokeshire Wales Apart from publishing a number of scientific papers he popularised his findings in a book The Private Life of the Rabbit which is credited by Richard Adams as having played a key role in his gaining a knowledge of rabbits and their ways that informed his novel Watership Down The other group was the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation CSIRO in Australia where numerous studies of the social behavior of wild rabbits were performed Since the onset of myxomatosis and the decline of the significance of the rabbit as an agricultural pest few large scale studies have been performed and many aspects of rabbit behaviour are still poorly understood Contents 1 Naming and etymology 2 Taxonomy 2 1 Subspecies 3 Fossil record 4 Description 5 Life history and behaviour 5 1 Social and territorial behaviours 5 2 Reproduction and development 5 3 Burrowing behaviour 5 4 Communication 6 Ecology 6 1 Habitat 6 2 Diet 6 3 Predators 6 4 Diseases and parasites 7 Human relationships with rabbits 7 1 As an introduced species 7 1 1 In the British Isles 7 1 2 In Australia 7 1 3 In Chile 7 2 Domesticated rabbits 7 3 Meat and fur 7 4 Conservation status 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Bibliography 10 External linksNaming and etymology editBecause of its non British origin the species does not have native names in English or Celtic with the usual terms cony and rabbit being foreign loanwords Rabbit is also pronounced as rabbidge rabbert North Devon and rappit Cheshire and Lancashire More archaic spellings include rabbette 15th 16th centuries rabet 15th 17th centuries rabbet 16th 18th centuries rabatte 16th century rabytt 17th century and rabit 18th century The root word is the Walloon rabett which was once commonly used in Liege Rabett itself is derived from the Middle Dutch robbe with the addition of the suffix ett 6 The term cony or coney antedates rabbit and first occurred during the 13th century to refer to the animal s pelt Later cony referred to the adult animal while rabbit referred to the young The root of cony is the old French connil or counil of which the Norman plural was coniz and later conis citation needed Connil comes from the Latin cuniculus 7 Its forerunner is the Greek koniklos The origin of koniklos itself is unclear AElian who lived during the third century linked the word to Celtiberian and later authors relate it to its Basque name unchi Varo and Pliny connected it to cuneus which refers to a wedge thus making reference to the animal s digging ability 6 The species dwelling place is termed a warren or cony garth Warren comes from the Old English wareine itself derived from the Old French warenne varenne or garenne The root word is the Low Latin warenna which originally signified a preserve in general only to be later used to refer specifically to an enclosure set apart for rabbits and hares 8 Cony garth derives from the Middle English conygerthe which may be a compound of connynge erthe cony earth The term stems from the Old French conniniere or coninyere and later conilliere The root word is the Low Latin cunicularia the feminine form of the adjective cunicularius which pertains to the rabbit 6 Taxonomy editOriginally assigned to the genus Lepus the European rabbit was consigned to its own genus in 1874 on account of its altricial young its burrowing habits and numerous skeletal characters 9 It is superficially similar to the North American cottontails Sylvilagus in that they are born blind and naked have white flesh and little sexual dimorphism However they differ in skull characteristics and cottontails do not construct their own burrows as the European rabbit does 10 Molecular studies confirm that the resemblance between the two is due to convergent evolution and that the European rabbit s closest relatives are the hispid hare the riverine rabbit and the Amami rabbit 11 The cladogram is from Matthee et al 2004 based on nuclear and mitochondrial gene analysis 12 Leporidae Nesolagus striped rabbits Poelagus Bunyoro rabbit Pronolagus red rock hares Romerolagus volcano rabbit Sylvilagus cottontails nbsp Brachylagus pygmy rabbit Caprolagus hispid hare Oryctolagus European rabbit nbsp Bunolagus riverine rabbit Pentalagus Amami rabbit Lepus hares nbsp Subspecies edit As of 2005 update 13 six subspecies are recognised by MSW3 Genetic studies undertaken in 2008 however indicate only two subspecies O c algirus and O c cuniculus with a hybrid zone connecting the two populations in central Iberia 14 Subspecies Trinomial authority Skull Description Range Synonyms Common rabbitO c cuniculus Nominate subspecies Linnaeus 1758 nbsp Native to most of Europe except eastern northern and alpine regions with long lasting snowfall Introduced to Australia New Zealand Chile Africa and several Atlantic and Pacific islands fodiens Gray 1867 kreyenbergi Honigmann 1913 vermicula Gray 1843 vernicularis Thompson 1837 Iberian rabbitO c algirus Loche 1858 nbsp Native to Portugal southern Spain North Africa and Mediterranean and Atlantic islands Mediterranean rabbitO c huxleyi Haeckel 1874 Derived from O c cuniculus its size varies from large hare like individuals on Desertas to dwarf forms on Salvages 15 The rabbits of Madeira are one third the weight of their mainland counterparts and have more reddish upper parts and greyer lower surfaces 16 Introduced to warm Atlantic islands including Madeira by Goncalves Zarco in 1418 Desertas the Salvage Islands and the Azores Cretan rabbitO c cnossius Bate 1906 A small subspecies similar to O c huxleyi 17 Native to Crete Camargue rabbitO c brachyotus Trouessart 1917 nbsp A black small headed subspecies with relatively short ears 18 Native to salt marshes of Camargue southern France Domestic rabbitO c domesticus Cabrera 1923 Domesticated African rabbitO c habetensis Cabrera 1923 Native to Morocco Straits of Gibraltar to Lau Yebala and Western Sahara oreas Cabrera 1923 Fossil record editThe oldest known fossils attributed to the modern European rabbit species are around 0 5 Ma 0 50 million yr old Middle Pleistocene 19 Palaeoichnological evidence exists of European rabbits burrowing in and disturbing what are likely Neanderthal burial sites 20 Description edit nbsp nbsp Melanistic rabbits are more common where ground predators are lacking such as on islands or in large enclosures 21 The European rabbit is smaller than the European hare and mountain hare and lacks black ear tips as well as having proportionately shorter legs 22 An adult European rabbit can measure 40 cm 16 in in length and weigh 1 200 2 000 g 2 6 4 4 lb The hind foot measures 8 5 10 cm 3 3 3 9 in in length while the ears are 6 5 7 5 cm 2 6 3 0 in long from the occiput 23 Size and weight vary according to food and habitat quality with rabbits living on light soil with nothing but grass to feed on being noticeably smaller than specimens living on highly cultivated farmlands with plenty of roots and clover Pure European rabbits weighing 5 kg 11 lb and upwards are uncommon but are occasionally reported One large specimen caught in February 1890 in Lichfield was weighed at 2 8 kg 6 lb 2 oz 24 Unlike the brown hare the male European rabbit is more heavily built than the female 25 The penis is short and lacks a baculum and true glans 9 The fur of the European rabbit is generally greyish brown but this is subject to much variation The guard hairs are banded brown and black or grey while the nape of the neck and scrotum are reddish The chest patch is brown while the rest of the underparts are white or grey A white star shape is often present on kits foreheads but rarely occurs in adults The whiskers are long and black and the feet are fully furred and buff coloured 9 The tail has a white underside which becomes prominent when escaping danger This may act as a signal for other rabbits to run 24 Moulting occurs once a year beginning in March on the face and spreading over the back The underfur is completely replaced by October November 9 The European rabbit exhibits great variation in colour from light sandy to dark grey and completely black Such variation depends largely on the amount of guard hairs relative to regular pelage Melanists are not uncommon in mainland Europe though albinoes are rare 21 Life history and behaviour edit nbsp Maternal Instinct circa 1898 G E Lodge nbsp Entrances to a warren Social and territorial behaviours edit The European rabbit lives in warrens that contain 2 10 other individuals living in smaller groups to ensure greater breeding success 26 Territoriality and aggression contribute greatly to the rabbits maturation process and help ensure survival of the population 27 Females tend to be more territorial than males although the areas most frequented by females are not defended 28 Territories are marked with dung hills 29 The size of the species home range varies according to habitat food shelter cover from predators and breeding sites though it is generally small encompassing about 0 3 0 7 ha 0 7 1 7 acres Except during times of low rabbit density and abundance of high quality food male ranges tend to be larger than those held by females The European rabbit rarely strays far from its burrow when feeding on cultivated fields it typically only moves 25 m 82 ft away from its burrow and rarely 50 m 160 ft It may however move as far as 500 m 1 600 ft after an abrupt change in environment such as a harvest This behaviour may be an antipredator adaptation as rabbits in areas where predators are under rigorous control may move three times further from their burrows than those in areas without predator management 30 The European rabbit is a gregarious animal which lives in stable social groups centred around females and sharing access to one or more burrow systems Social structures tend to be looser in areas where burrow construction is relatively easy Dominance hierarchies exist in parallel for both bucks and does Among bucks status is determined through access to does with dominant bucks siring the majority of the colony s offspring The dominant does have priority access to the best nesting sites with competition over such sites often leading to serious injury or death Subordinate does particularly in large colonies typically resort to using single entrance breeding spots far from the main warren thus making themselves vulnerable to fox or badger predation 30 Reproduction and development edit In the European rabbit s mating system dominant bucks exhibit polygyny whereas lower status individuals both bucks and does often form monogamous breeding relationships citation needed Rabbits signal their readiness to copulate by marking other animals and inanimate objects with an odoriferous substance secreted though a chin gland in a process known as chinning 31 Though male European rabbits may sometimes be amicable with one another fierce fights can erupt among bucks during the breeding season 32 typically January to August A succession of litters usually three to seven kittens each are produced but in overpopulated areas pregnant does may lose all their embryos through intrauterine resorption 33 Shortly before giving birth the doe constructs a separate burrow known as a stop or stab generally in an open field away from the main warren These breeding burrows are typically a few feet long and are lined with grass and moss as well as fur plucked from the doe s belly The breeding burrow protects the kits from adult bucks and predators 34 The gestation period of the European rabbit is 30 days 35 with the sex ratio of male to female kits tending to be 1 1 Greater maternal investment over male offspring may result in higher birth weights for bucks 33 Kits born to the dominant buck and doe which enjoy better nesting and feeding grounds tend to grow larger and stronger and become more dominant than those born to subordinate rabbits 36 Not uncommonly European rabbits mate again immediately after giving birth with some specimens having been observed to nurse previous young whilst pregnant 35 Female European rabbits nurse their kits once a night for only a few minutes After suckling is complete the doe seals the entrance to the stop with soil and vegetation In its native Iberian and southern French range European rabbit young have a growth rate of 5 g 0 18 oz per day though such kittens in non native ranges may grow 10 g 0 35 oz per day Weight at birth is 30 35 g 1 1 1 2 oz and increases to 150 200 g 5 3 7 1 oz by 21 25 days during the weaning period 33 European rabbit kits are born blind deaf and nearly naked The ears do not gain the power of motion until 10 days of age and can be erected after 13 The eyes open 11 days after birth 35 At 18 days the kittens begin to leave the burrow Sexual maturity in bucks is attained at 4 months while does can begin to breed at 3 5 months 33 Burrowing behaviour edit The European rabbit s burrows occur mostly on slopes and banks where drainage is more efficient The burrow entrances are typically 10 50 cm 4 20 in in diameter 22 and are easily recognisable by the bare earth at their mouths Vegetation growth is prevented by the constant passing and repassing of the resident rabbits Big burrows are complex excavations which may descend to depths of several feet They are not constructed on any specified plan and appear to be enlarged or improved as a result of the promiscuous activity of several generations Digging is done by pulling the soil backwards with the fore feet and throwing it between the hind legs which scatter the material with kicking motions While most burrows are dug from the outside some warrens feature holes dug from the inside which act as emergency exits when escaping from predators below ground These holes usually descend perpendicularly to 1 1 2 m 3 4 ft and their mouths lack the bare earth characteristic of burrow entrances While kits sleep in chambers lined with grass and fur adults sleep on the bare earth likely to escape dampness with warmth being secured by huddling 37 Although both sexes dig does do so more skillfully and for longer periods 38 Communication edit The European rabbit is a relatively quiet animal though it has at least two vocalisations The best known is a high treble scream or squeal 39 This distress call has been likened to the cry of a piglet 40 This sound is uttered when in extreme distress such as being caught by a predator or trap 39 During the spring bucks express contentment by emitting grunting sounds when approaching other rabbits These grunts are similar to shrill hiccups and are emitted with the mouth closed Aggression is expressed with a low growl 40 Ecology edit nbsp Attacked by a stoat Northumberland UK nbsp Myxomatosis Habitat edit The European rabbit s ideal habitat consists of short grasslands with secure refuge such as burrows boulders hedgerows scrub and woodland near feeding areas It may dwell up to treeline as long as the land is well drained and shelter is available The size and distribution of its burrow systems depend on the type of soil present In areas with loose soil it selects sites with supporting structures such as tree roots or shrubs to prevent burrow collapse Warrens tend to be larger and have more interconnected tunnels in areas with chalk than those in sand In large coniferous plantations the species only occurs on peripheral areas and along fire breaks and rides 41 Diet edit The European rabbit eats a wide variety of herbage especially grasses favouring the young succulent leaves and shoots of the most nutritious species particularly fescues In mixed cultivated areas winter wheat is preferred over maize and dicotyledons During the summer the European rabbit feeds on the shortest and therefore less nutritious grass swards thus indicating that grazing grounds are selected through antipredator considerations rather than maximising food intake In times of scarcity the rabbit increases its food intake selecting the parts of the plant with the highest nitrogen content 42 Hungry rabbits in winter may resort to eating tree bark Blackberries are also eaten and captive bred European rabbits have been fed on fodder consisting of furze and acorns which can lead to considerable weight gain 43 The European rabbit is a less fussy eater than the brown hare When eating root vegetables the rabbit eats them whole while the hare tends to leave the peel 44 Depending on the body s fat and protein reserves the species can survive without food in winter for about 2 8 days 42 Although herbivorous cases are known of rabbits eating snails 43 Like other leporids the European rabbit produces soft mucus covered faecal pellets which are ingested directly from the anus 42 The soft pellets are produced posterior to the colon in the hind gut soon after the excretion of hard pellets and the stomach begins to fill with newly grazed food The soft pellets are filled with protein rich bacteria and pass down to the rectum in glossy clusters The rabbit swallows them whole without perforating the enveloping membrane 45 Predators edit The European rabbit is prey to many different predatory species Foxes dingoes wolves lynxes wolverines and dogs kill both adult and young rabbits by stalking and surprising them in the open but relatively few rabbits are caught this way as they can quickly rush back to cover with a burst of speed 46 Further evidence from a study in Spain suggests they may avoid areas where the recent scat of predators which have eaten rabbit is detected 47 Both foxes and badgers dig out kittens from shallow burrows with the latter predators being too slow to catch adult rabbits Both wild and domestic cats can stalk and leap upon rabbits particularly young specimens leaving their burrows for the first time 46 Wildcats take rabbits according to availability in eastern Scotland where rabbits are abundant they can make up over 90 of the wildcats diet 23 Most domestic cats are incapable of killing healthy full grown adults but will take weak and diseased ones Does can be fiercely protective of their kits having been observed to chase away large cats and mustelids including ferrets stoats and weasels However rabbits typically run from mustelids and may fear them innately Cases are known of rabbits becoming paralysed with fear and dying when pursued by stoats or weasels even when rescued unharmed 46 The European rabbit makes up 85 of the polecat s diet and its availability is important to the success of breeding female mink 23 Brown rats can be a serious threat to kittens as they will reside in rabbit burrows during the summer and attack them in groups 48 49 Although many birds of prey are capable of killing rabbits few are strong enough to carry them Large species such as golden and sea eagles may carry rabbits back to their nests while small eagles buzzards and harriers struggle to do so Hawks and owls typically only carry off very small kits 46 Diseases and parasites edit The European rabbit is the only species fatally attacked by myxomatosis The most lethal strain has a five day incubation period after which the eyelids swell with the inflammation quickly spreading to the base of the ears the forehead and nose At the same time the anal and genital areas also swell During the last stages of the disease the swellings discharge a fluid rich in viral material with death usually following on the 11th 12th day of infection 50 In Britain the primary carrier of myxomatosis is the flea Spilopsyllus cuniculi while in Australia it is mosquitoes Rabbit haemorrhagic disease RHD also known as viral haemorrhagic disease or rabbit calicivirus disease in Australia is specific to the European rabbit and causes lesions of acute necrotising hepatitis disseminated intravascular coagulation and haemorrhaging mainly in the lungs Susceptible specimens may die within 30 hours of infection Most rabbits in the UK are immune to RHD due to exposure to a weaker strain 51 52 Human relationships with rabbits edit nbsp Two rabbits on the steps of Finnish National Opera in Helsinki Recent research has shown that all European rabbits carry common genetic markers and descend from one of two maternal lines These lines originated between 12 000 and 6 5 million years ago when glaciers isolated two herds one on the Iberian Peninsula and the other in Southern France Humans likely began hunting rabbits as a food source but further research needs to be done to verify this Little comprehensive evidence of the relationship of humans with European rabbits is documented until the medieval period 53 Humans relationship with the European rabbit was first recorded by the Phoenicians prior to 1000 BC when they termed the Iberian Peninsula i Shaphan im literally the land of the hyraxes This phrase closely resembles related modern Hebrew I אי meaning island and shafan שפן meaning hyrax plural shfanim שפנים Phoenicians called the local rabbits hyraxes because rabbits resemble hyraxes in some ways and hyraxes are native to Phoenicia unlike rabbits Hyraxes like rabbits are not rodents One theory states that the Romans converted the phrase i Shaphan im with influence from the Greek Spania to its Latin form Hispania which evolved in all the Iberian languages into Castilian Espana Portuguese Espanha Catalan Espanya English Spain and such other variations in modern languages Different views have been voiced on the precise meaning of shafan but the balance of opinion appears to indicate that the hyrax is indeed the intended meaning 54 Like the Phoenicians neither the later Greek nor Roman colonizers had a specific name for the rabbit because the species is not native to Greece and Italy though it is present there nowadays They commonly called it small hare and small digging hare in contrast to the European hare which is larger and does not make burrows Catullus used the name cuniculus a latinization of the Iberian word kiniklos 55 and the etymological origin of the Castilian name conejo Portuguese coelho and Catalan conill 56 and the old English name coney 57 and referenced its abundance in Celtiberia by calling this region cuniculosa i e rabbit ridden 58 59 The European rabbit is the only rabbit species that has been domesticated and all 305 global rabbit breeds from Netherland Dwarf to Flemish Giant are descendants of the European rabbit Rabbits are an example of an animal that can be treated as a food a pet or a pest by different members of the same culture In some urban areas infestations of feral European rabbits descended from pets have become a problem Helsinki for example host to one of the northernmost populations of the species had an estimated 2 500 European rabbits at the end of 2006 doubling to 5 000 by autumn 2007 60 In Iceland populations of O cuniculus are found in urban Reykjavik as well as in the Vestmannaeyjar archipelago In Finland the introduced European rabbit vies with the native lagomorphs the European hare and the mountain hare As an introduced species edit nbsp Feral rabbits on the island of Ōkunoshima The European rabbit was introduced to the island following World War II as part of the development of a park and established a self sustaining population in the latter half of the 20th century The European rabbit has been introduced as an exotic species into several environments often with harmful results to vegetation and local wildlife making it an invasive species The first known mention of the rabbit as an invasive species and possibly the first documented instance of an invasive species ever was made in regard to the introduction of the rabbit to the Balearic Islands after the Roman conquest of the first century BCE According to both Strabo and Pliny the Elder the multiplying rabbits caused famines by destroying crop yields and even collapsed trees and houses with their burrowing The inhabitants petitioned Augustus for help who sent troops to curb the rabbit population with the help of ferrets 58 59 Other locations where the European rabbit was introduced include Great Britain two of the Hawaiian Islands Laysan Island in 1903 and Lisianski Island Oceania s Macquarie Island Washington s Smith Island and San Juan Island around 1900 and later spreading to the other San Juan Islands several islands off the coast of Southern Africa including Robben Island and Australia and New Zealand citation needed The two accounts over the introduction of rabbits in Ukraine are conflicting One holds that the species was brought there in the early 20th century by Austrian nobleman Graf Malokhovsky who released them on his estate near the Khadzhibey Estuary while another holds that rabbits were first brought to Kherson from Switzerland in 1894 1895 by landowner Pinkovsky 61 In the British Isles edit The European rabbit is widespread in both Great Britain Ireland and most islands except for Isles of Scilly Rum Tiree and some small Scottish islands such as Gunna Sanday and most of the Treshnish Isles 62 It was likely first brought to Britain by the Normans after the 1066 conquest of England as no pre Norman British allusions to the animal have been found The rabbit was nonetheless scarce or absent throughout most of England a short time afterwards as warrens are not mentioned in the Domesday Book or any other 11th century documents Rabbits became well known but not necessarily accepted members of British fauna between the 12th and 13th centuries with the first real evidence of their presence consisting of a number of bones from the midden of Rayleigh Castle which was occupied from the 11th 13th centuries The first references to rabbits in Ireland occur roughly at the same time as English ones thus indicating another Norman introduction They had become plentiful probably at a local level by the 13th century as indicated by an inquisition of Lundy Island made in 1274 describing how 2 000 rabbits were caught annually Subsequent allusions in official documents became more frequent with the species later becoming an important food item in feasts 63 Increases in truly wild populations occurred slowly primarily in the coastal areas and lowland heaths of Breckland and Norfolk Notable population increases occurred after 1750 when changes in agricultural practices created favourable habitat and increasing interest in game management resulted in intensive predator control campaigns 41 Although now common in the Scottish lowlands the species was little known in Scotland before the 19th century Until then it was confined to portions of the Edinburgh district at least as far back as the 16th century certain islands and the coastal sand dunes of the Scottish mainland Although unknown in Caithness in 1743 the species became well established there by 1793 63 Myxomatosis entered Britain from France in 1953 and reached Ireland by 1954 51 prompting the RSPB to set up mercy squads meant to euthanise myxomatous rabbits 64 Major myxomatosis outbreaks still occur in Britain peaking twice annually in spring and especially in the late summer or autumn periods though immunity has reduced the mortality rate from 99 to 5 33 51 Between 1996 and 2018 rabbit numbers fell by 88 in the east Midlands 83 in Scotland and 43 across the whole of the UK Numbers are still falling in 2021 Pip Mountjoy Shifting Sands project manager at Natural England said They rabbits are actually an endangered species in their native region on the Iberian peninsula It is surprising for people that rabbits are important in some ecosystems We think of them as a pest but in Britain they are a keystone species they act as landscape managers and a lot of other species rely on them The Shifting Sands project aims to encourage landowners to create safe habitats for rabbits consisting of piles of branches placed near existing rabbit warrens Species that depend in rabbits grazing habits include purple milk vetch rare spring sedge spring speedwell prostrate perennial knawel caterpillars of the lunar yellow underwing moth stone curlew and the large blue butterfly 65 In Australia edit nbsp A feral rabbit on a farm in Victoria Australia Twenty four specimens of the European rabbit were introduced to Australia in 1859 by estate owner Thomas Austin in Victoria Their descendants multiplied and spread throughout the country due to the lack of natural predators a conducive habitat provided by widespread farming and the mild Australian winters that allowed year round breeding Australia s native equivalent the bilby was quickly pushed out by the invasive rabbit The bilbies are endangered but are now making a comeback due to government protection Between 1901 and 1907 Australia built an immense rabbit proof fence to halt the westward expansion of the infestation The European rabbit however can not only jump very high but also burrow underground making fencing essentially futile During the 1950s the intentional introduction of a virus that causes myxomatosis provided some relief in Australia but not in New Zealand where the insect vectors necessary for the spread of the disease were not present Myxomatosis can also infect pet rabbits the same species Today s remaining feral rabbits in Australia are largely immune to myxomatosis A second deadly rabbit virus rabbit hemorrhagic disease RHD has been cleared in Australia as a biological control agent and has already killed millions of the European rabbits there RHD was also introduced illegally in New Zealand with less success due to improper timing In Chile edit The exact date on which the European rabbit was introduced into Chile is unknown though the first references to it occur during the mid 18th century By the 19th century several authors referred to the presence of both rabbits and rabbit hutches in central Chile The importation and breeding of rabbits was encouraged by the state as rabbits were seen as cheap sources of food for peasants Whether or not their escape into the wild was intentional is unknown but warnings over the dangers of feral rabbits were raised during the early 20th century and the species had propagated dramatically by the late 1920s in central Chile Tierra del Fuego and the Juan Fernandez Islands In the 1930s the state sought to tackle the rabbit problem by banning fox hunting though it was later discovered that indigenous South American foxes rarely preyed on rabbits preferring native species In modern times the European rabbit problem has not been resolved definitively though a deliberate outbreak of myxomatosis in Tierra del Fuego successfully reduced local rabbit populations The species remains a problem in central Chile and on Juan Fernandez despite international financing 66 Domesticated rabbits edit Main article Domestic rabbit The European rabbit is the only rabbit to be widely domesticated for food or as a pet It was first widely kept in ancient Rome where fetal rabbits were known as laurices and considered a delicacy and has been refined into a wide variety of breeds during and since the Middle Ages Domesticated rabbits have mostly been bred to be much larger than wild rabbits though selective breeding has produced a range of sizes from dwarf to giant which are kept as food animals and pets across the world They have as much color variation among themselves as other livestock and pet animals Their fur is prized for its softness today Angora rabbits are raised for their long soft fur which is often spun into yarn Other breeds are raised for the fur industry particularly the Rex which has a smooth velvet like coat and occurs in a wide variety of colors and sizes nbsp A brown domesticated Netherland dwarf crossbreed loafing legs and paw tucked under the body nbsp A sleeping white spotted Holland lop nbsp 5 weeks old domesticated bunny of unknown breed nbsp A grey Holland lop rabbit nbsp A brown domesticated Netherlands dwarf crossbreed nbsp An elderly black and white domesticated rabbit of unknown breed Meat and fur edit In the United Kingdom rabbit was a popular food source for the poorer classes Among wild rabbits those native to Spain were reputed to have the highest meat quality followed by those in the Ardennes As rabbits hold very little fat they were hardly ever roasted being instead boiled fried or stewed 67 The pelt of the rabbit is heavier and more durable than the hare s 68 Marshall calculated that the value of the skin in proportion to the carcass was greater than that of the sheep and ox 69 Its fur is primarily used for felting or hats It is also dyed or clipped and sold as imitations of more valuable furbearers such as fur seal Although cheap and easily acquired rabbit fur has little durability 70 Conservation status edit Though the European rabbit thrives in many of the locations where it was introduced in its native Iberia populations are dwindling In 2005 the Portuguese Institute for Nature Conservation and Forests classified O cuniculus in Portugal as near threatened 71 while in 2006 Spanish authorities SECEM reclassified it in Spain as vulnerable 72 In 2018 the International Union for Conservation of Nature reclassified O cuniculus in Spain Portugal and France as endangered due to the extent of recent declines Worldwide the species is also endangered 3 See also edit nbsp Rabbits and hares portal Cuniculture on the practice of breeding and raising the domesticated version of the European rabbit List of breeds of the domesticated version of the European rabbitReferences edit Hoffman R S Smith A T 2005 Order Lagomorpha In Wilson D E Reeder D M eds Mammal Species of the World A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference 3rd ed Johns Hopkins University Press pp 205 206 ISBN 978 0 8018 8221 0 OCLC 62265494 Fossilworks Oryctolagus cuniculus a b Villafuerte R amp Delibes Mateos M 2020 errata version of 2019 assessment Oryctolagus cuniculus IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2019 e T41291A170619657 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2019 3 RLTS T41291A170619657 en Retrieved 17 February 2022 coney n 1 OED Online Oxford University Press 1 March 2018 Retrieved 25 April 2018 ADW Oryctolagus cuniculus INFORMATION Animal Diversity Web a b c Barrett Hamilton Hinton amp Wilson 1910 pp 177 179 CNRTL 2012 connil Harting amp Shand 1898 pp 51 52 a b c d Harris amp Yalden 2008 pp 203 Barrett Hamilton Hinton amp Wilson 1910 pp 173 Harris amp Yalden 2008 pp 201 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 PMID 15503672 Wozencraft W C 2005 Order Carnivora In Wilson D E Reeder D M eds Mammal Species of the World A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference 3rd ed Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 0 8018 8221 0 OCLC 62265494 Ferrand N 2008 Inferring the Evolutionary History of the European Rabbit Oryctolagus cuniculus from Molecular Markers In Alves P C Ferrand N Hacklander K eds Lagomorph Biology Springer Berlin Heidelberg ISBN 978 3 540 72445 2 Lockley 1976 pp 146 Harting amp Shand 1898 pp 15 Barrett Hamilton Hinton amp Wilson 1910 pp 199 Trouessart E L 1917 Le lapin de Porto Santo et le lapin negre de la Camargue Bulletin du Museum d Histoire Naturelle 6 366 373 Lopez Martinez Nieves 2008 The Lagomorph Fossil Record and the Origin of the European Rabbit Springer Berlin Heidelberg ISBN 978 3 540 72445 2 Pelletier Maxime Royer Aurelien Holliday Trenton W Discamps Emmanuel Madelaine Stephane Maureille Bruno 1 September 2017 Rabbits in the grave Consequences of bioturbation on the Neandertal burial at Regourdou Montignac sur Vezere Dordogne Journal of Human Evolution 110 1 17 doi 10 1016 j jhevol 2017 04 001 ISSN 0047 2484 Retrieved 25 February 2024 via Elsevier Science Direct a b Harris amp Yalden 2008 pp 204 205 a b Harris amp Yalden 2008 pp 202 a b c Harris amp Yalden 2008 pp 204 a b Harting amp Shand 1898 pp 13 15 Barrett Hamilton Hinton amp Wilson 1910 pp 199 201 Daly J C 1981 Effects of Social Organization and Environmental Diversity on Determining the Genetic Structure of a Population of the Wild Rabbit Oryctolagus cuniculus Evolution 35 4 689 706 doi 10 1111 j 1558 5646 1981 tb04930 x PMID 28563139 S2CID 19352143 Dudzinski M L Mykytowycz R Gambale S 1977 Behavioral Characteristics of Adolescence in Young Captive European Rabbits Oryctolagus cuniculus Aggressive Behavior 3 4 313 330 doi 10 1002 1098 2337 1977 3 4 lt 313 AID AB2480030402 gt 3 0 CO 2 Z Vastrade Francoise M 1987 Spacing Behavior of Free Ranging Domestic Rabbits Oryctolagus cuniculus L Applied Animal Behaviour Science 18 2 185 195 doi 10 1016 0168 1591 87 90192 4 Mykytowycz R Dudzinski M L 1972 Aggressive and Protective Behaviour of Adult Rabbits Oryctolagus cuniculus L Towards Rabbits Behaviour 43 1 97 120 doi 10 1163 156853973x00490 JSTOR 4533471 PMID 4676335 a b Harris amp Yalden 2008 pp 206 207 Gonzalez Mariscal Gabriela Albonetti Maria Emanuela Cuamatzi Evelia Beyer Carlos 1997 Transitory inhibition of scent marking by copulation in male and female rabbits Animal Behaviour 53 2 323 333 doi 10 1006 anbe 1996 0327 S2CID 53166150 Lockley 1976 pp 97 a b c d Harris amp Yalden 2008 pp 207 209 Barrett Hamilton Hinton amp Wilson 1910 pp 214 a b c Barrett Hamilton Hinton amp Wilson 1910 pp 210 212 Lockley 1976 pp 100 Barrett Hamilton Hinton amp Wilson 1910 pp 202 205 Lockley 1976 pp 58 a b Lockley 1976 pp 23 a b Barrett Hamilton Hinton amp Wilson 1910 pp 227 a b Harris amp Yalden 2008 pp 206 a b c Harris amp Yalden 2008 pp 207 a b Barrett Hamilton Hinton amp Wilson 1910 pp 225 Harting amp Shand 1898 pp 6 Lockley 1976 pp 104 105 a b c d Lockley 1976 pp 139 142 Prada Laura M Guerrero Casado Jose Tortosa Francisco S 18 July 2018 European rabbits recognise conspecifics in their predators diets Acta Ethologica 21 3 163 168 doi 10 1007 s10211 018 0295 6 S2CID 52272985 Harting amp Shand 1898 pp 39 Barrett Hamilton Hinton amp Wilson 1910 pp 212 Lockley 1976 pp 116 a b c Harris amp Yalden 2008 pp 209 210 Harting amp Shand 1898 pp 46 History of Rabbit Domestication Western Europe Archived from the original on 2011 07 11 The Camel the Hare and the Hyrax chapter 6 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 16 June 2012 ORIGEN IBERICO DEL CONEJO studylib es Corominas Joan amp Jose A Pascual 1980 Diccionario critico etimologico castellano e hispanico Vol 2 s v conejo Madrid Gredos Definition of CONEY www merriam webster com a b Lopez Seoane V 1861 Fauna Mastologica de Galicia o historia natural de los mamiferos de este antiguo Reino aplicada a la medicina a la agricultura a la industria a las artes y al comercio Manuel Miras 544 pages a b Blazquez J M 1975 La romanizacion Ediciones Akal 437 pages Kemppainen Jouni K October 2007 Kanit keskuudessamme The rabbits among us Suomen Kuvalehti in Finnish 76 83 Ognev 1962 p 242 Harris amp Yalden 2008 pp 205 206 a b Barrett Hamilton Hinton amp Wilson 1910 pp 184 189 Lockley 1976 pp 115 Barkham Patrick 28 November 2021 Hope rabbit hotels can help Britain s decimated population bounce back The Guardian Retrieved 28 November 2021 Camus Pablo Castro Sergio Jaksic Fabian European rabbits in Chile the history of a biological invasion Historia Santiago v 4 n se Santiago 2008 ISSN 0717 7194 Harting amp Shand 1898 pp 222 248 Petersen Marcus 1914 The fur traders and fur bearing animals Buffalo Hammond Press p 291 Barrett Hamilton Hinton amp Wilson 1910 pp 188 Barrett Hamilton Hinton amp Wilson 1910 pp 191 Livro Vermelho dos Vertebrados de Portugal Red Book Instituto da Conservacao da Natureza ICNF 12 December 2005 ISBN 978 972 775 153 2 Archived from the original on 23 August 2021 Retrieved 29 March 2018 SECEM 2006 red list PDF secem es Archived from the original PDF on 2007 10 06 Bibliography edit Barrett Hamilton Gerald Edwin Hamilton Hinton Martin A C Wilson Edward Adrian 1910 A history of British mammals v 2 pt 2 London Gurney and Jackson Centre National de Ressources Textuelles et Lexicales National Center of Textual and Lexical Resources CNRTL fr in French 2012 Harris Stephen Yalden Derek 2008 Mammals of the British Isles Mammal Society 4th Revised edition ISBN 978 0 906282 65 6 Harting James Edmund Shand A I 1898 The rabbit with a chapter on Cookery London Longmans Lockley R M 1976 The Private Life of the Rabbit Readers Union Group of Book Clubs Ognev Sergei Ivanovich 1962 Mammals of Eastern Europe and Northern Asia Vol 4 Israel Program for Scientific Translations External links edit nbsp Media related to Oryctolagus cuniculus at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Data related to Oryctolagus cuniculus at Wikispecies nbsp Look up european rabbit in Wiktionary the free dictionary View the rabbit genome in Ensembl View the oryCun2 genome assembly in the UCSC Genome Browser Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title European rabbit amp oldid 1220013064, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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