The pygmy rabbit is the world's smallest leporid,[7][8][9][10] with adults weighing between 375 and 500 grams (0.827 and 1.102 lb), and having a body length between 23.5 and 29.5 centimeters (9.3 and 11.6 in); females are slightly larger than males. The pygmy rabbit is distinguishable from other leporids by its small size, short ears, gray color, small hind legs, and lack of white fuzzy fur.
Distribution
The range of the pygmy rabbit includes most of the Great Basin and some of the adjacent intermountain areas of western North America.[11] Pygmy rabbits are found in southwestern Montana from the extreme southwest corner near the Idaho border north to Dillon and Bannack in Beaverhead County.[12] Distribution continues west to southern Idaho and southern Oregon, and south to northern Utah, northern Nevada, and north-eastern California. An isolated population occurs in east-central Washington,[13] and another in Wyoming.[14]
The elevational range of pygmy rabbits in Nevada extends from 1,370–2,135 meters (4,495–7,005 ft) and in California from 1,520–1,615 meters (4,987–5,299 ft).[11]
Pygmy rabbits are capable of breeding when they are about 1 year old.[11][17]
The breeding season of pygmy rabbits is very short. In Idaho it lasts from March through May; in Utah, from February through March.[18] The gestation period of pygmy rabbits is unknown. It is between 27 and 30 days in various species of cottontails (Sylvilagus spp.). An average of six young are born per litter and a maximum of three litters are produced per year.[11] In Idaho the third litter is generally produced in June.[17] It is unlikely that litters are produced in the fall.[11]
The growth rates of juveniles are dependent on the date of birth. Young from early litters grow larger due to a longer developmental period prior to their first winter.[11]
The mortality of adults is highest in late winter and early spring. Green & Flinders (1980)[11] reported a maximum estimated annual adult mortality of 88% in Idaho. Juvenile mortality was highest from birth to 5 weeks of age.[11]
Pygmy rabbits may be active at any time of day; however, they are generally most active at dusk and dawn. They usually rest near or inside their burrows during midday.[11]
Habitat
Pygmy rabbits are normally found in areas on deep soils with tall, dense sagebrush which they use for shelter and food.[11][12] Individual sagebrush plants in areas inhabited by pygmy rabbits are often 6 feet (1.8 m) or more in height.[12] Extensive, well-used runways interlace the sage thickets and provide travel and escape routes.[11] Dense
stands of big sagebrush along streams, roads, and fencerows provide dispersal corridors for pygmy rabbits.[19]
The pygmy rabbit is the only leporid native to North America that digs burrows.[5][6] Juveniles use burrows more than other age groups. Early reproductive activities of adults may be concentrated at burrows.[11] When pygmy rabbits can utilize sagebrush cover, burrow use is decreased. Pygmy rabbits use burrows more in the winter for thermal cover than at other times of the year.[17]
Burrows are usually located on slopes at the base of sagebrush plants, and face north to east. Tunnels widen below the surface, forming chambers, and extend to a maximum depth of about 1 meter (3.3 ft). Burrows typically have 4 or 5 entrances but may have as few as 2 or as many as 10.[11] In Oregon, pygmy rabbits inhabited areas where soils were significantly deeper and looser than soils at adjacent sites. Site selection was probably related to ease of excavation of burrows.[19] In areas where soil is shallow pygmy rabbits live in holes among volcanic rocks, in stone walls, around abandoned buildings, and in burrows made by badgers (Taxidea taxus) and marmots (Marmota flaviventris).[11][13]
Some researchers have found that pygmy rabbits never venture farther than 60 feet (18 m) from their burrows.[13] However, Bradfield[13] observed pygmy rabbits range up to 100 meters (330 ft) from their burrows.
Some areas inhabited by pygmy rabbits are covered with several feet of snow for up to 2 or more months during the winter. During periods when the snow has covered most of the sagebrush, pygmy rabbits tunnel beneath the snow to find food. Snow tunnels are approximately the same height and width as burrows. They are quite extensive and extend from one sagebrush to another.[11][13] Above ground movement during the winter months is restricted to these tunnel systems.[13]
Cover requirements
Pygmy rabbits are restricted to areas with heavy shrub cover.[11][12] Pygmy rabbits are seldom found in areas of sparse vegetative cover and seem to be reluctant to cross open space.[13] In southeastern Idaho, woody cover and shrub height were significantly (p < 0.01) greater on sites occupied by pygmy rabbits than on other sites in the same area.[20]
The primary food of pygmy rabbits is big sagebrush, which may comprise up to 99% of the food eaten in the winter. Grasses and forbs are also eaten from mid- to late summer.[11][13][20][24] In Idaho, Gates & Eng (1984)[24] found that shrubs contributed 85.2% (unweighted mean) of pygmy rabbit diets from July to December. Shrub use was lowest in August (73.1%) and highest in December (97.9%). Big sagebrush was the most important shrub in the July to December diet (54.2%), followed by rubber rabbitbrush (Chrysothamnus nauseosus, 25.8%) and winterfat (Krascheninnikovia lanata, 4.6%). Grasses comprised 10% of the July to December diet and were consumed mostly during July and August. Indian ricegrass (Oryzopsis hymenoides) and needlegrass (Stipa spp.) were the most important grasses consumed. Forbs contributed 4.9% of the July to December diet.[24]
In southeastern Idaho, Green & Flinders (1980)[20] found that pygmy rabbits ate big sagebrush throughout the year, but in lesser amounts in summer (51% of diet) than in winter (99% of diet). Other shrubs in the area were consumed infrequently. Grass and forb consumption was relatively constant throughout the summer (39% and 10% of diet respectively) and decreased to a trace amount through fall and winter. Thickspike wheatgrass, bluebunch wheatgrass (Pseudoroegneria spicata), and Sandberg bluegrass were preferred foods in the summer.[20]
^Goodwin, George Gilbert; Drimmer, Frederick (1954). The Animal kingdom: the strange and wonderful ways of mammals, birds, reptiles, fishes, and insects; a new and authentic natural history of the wildlife of the world. Vol. 1. Cornell University. p. 246. ASINB09SHGMG2M.
^Goodwin, George C. (1962). Small mammals. Cornell University.
^ abcdFlath, Dennis. 1994. Bunnies by the bunch. Montana Outdoors. 25(3): 8–13.
^ abcdefghijBradfield, Terry D. (1975). On the behavior and ecology of the pygmy rabbit (Thesis). Pocatello, ID: Idaho State University.
^Campbell, Thomas M.; Clark, Tim W.; Groves, Craig R. (1982). "First record of pygmy rabbits (Brachylagus idahoensis) in Wyoming". Great Basin Naturalist. 42 (1): 100.
^Chapman, Joseph A.; Feldhamer, George A., eds. (1982). Wild mammals of North America. Baltimore, MD: The Johns Hopkins University Press.
^ abWeiss, Nondor T.; Verts, B. J. (1984). "Habitat and distribution of pygmy rabbits (Sylvilagus idahoensis) in Oregon". Great Basin Naturalist. 44 (4): 563–571. JSTOR41712112.
^ abcdefgGreen, Jeffery S.; Flinders, Jerran T. (1980). "Habitat and dietary relationships of the pygmy rabbit". Journal of Range Management. 33 (2): 136–142. doi:10.2307/3898429. hdl:10150/646516. JSTOR3898429.
^Larrucea, Eveline S.; Brussard, Peter F. (2008). "Habitat selection and current distribution of the pygmy rabbit in Nevada and California, USA". Journal of Mammalogy. 89 (3): 691–699. doi:10.1644/07-MAMM-A-199R.1. S2CID55487275.
^ abSeveraid, Joye Harold (1950). "The pigmy rabbit (Sylvilagus idahoensis) in Mono County, California". Journal of Mammalogy. 31 (1): 1–4. doi:10.2307/1375469. JSTOR1375469.