Burmese hare

Species of mammal

Burmese hare
Conservation status

Least Concern  (IUCN 3.1)[1]
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Lagomorpha
Family: Leporidae
Genus: Lepus
Species:
L. peguensis
Binomial name
Lepus peguensis
Blyth, 1855
Burmese hare range

The Burmese hare (Lepus peguensis) is a species of mammal in the family Leporidae.[2] It is found in Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, and Vietnam.

Subspecies

Three subspecies are recognised; L. p. peguensis, L. p. siamensis and L. p. vassali.[3]

Description

The Burmese hare is a small to moderate sized species with adults growing to a length of 35 to 50 centimetres (14 to 20 in)[1] and weighing between 2 and 2.5 kilograms (4.4 and 5.5 lb).[3] The long ears have black tips, the dorsal surface of the body is reddish-grey tinged with black, the rump is rather greyer and the underparts are white. The tail is white above and black below and the feet are white in individuals from Burma and reddish-brown or yellowish-brown in those from Thailand.[4]

Distribution and habitat

The range of the Burmese hare extends from southern Myanmar, south of the Chindwin River, to northern parts of the Malay Peninsula, including Thailand, Cambodia, southern Laos and southern Vietnam.[1] It is mainly a lowland species but has been recorded as high as 1,300 metres (4,300 ft) in the mountains of Thailand although other surveys have not found it higher than 800 metres (2,600 ft) elsewhere. Its typical habitats are cropland and dry wasteland, clearings in forests and coastal sandy areas.[3] It is common in seasonally-inundated riverside flats, and is present in rice fields cultivated in a traditional manner while avoiding heavily irrigated, intensively-grown paddies.[1]

Biology

The Burmese hare is nocturnal and feeds on grass, twigs and bark. Several litters of young, averaging three or four, are borne in a year after a gestation period of about thirty-seven days. The average lifespan is estimated to be six years.[1]

Status

Threats faced by the Burmese hare include the increased cultivation of irrigated rice paddies, which results in unsuitable habitat, and being hunted for food. However the hare has a wide range and is a common animal. The population is stable, or even possibly increasing in places where logging results in favourable scrubby habitat, so the International Union for Conservation of Nature lists its conservation status as being of "least concern".[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Johnston, C.H.; Smith, A.T. (2019). "Lepus peguensis". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2019: e.T41284A45188632. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2019-1.RLTS.T41284A45188632.en. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
  2. ^ 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. p. 202. ISBN 978-0-8018-8221-0. OCLC 62265494.
  3. ^ a b c Joseph A. Chapman; John E. C. Flux (1990). Rabbits, Hares and Pikas: Status Survey and Conservation Action Plan. IUCN. pp. 84–85. ISBN 978-2-8317-0019-9.
  4. ^ "Lepus peguensis: Burmese hare". Wildpro. Archived from the original on 2019-05-25. Retrieved 2014-09-20.
  • v
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Extant Lagomorpha species
Family Ochotonidae (Pikas)
Ochotona
  • Subgenus Pika: Alpine pika (O. alpina)
  • Helan Shan pika (O. argentata)
  • Collared pika (O. collaris)
  • Korean pika (O. coreana)
  • Hoffmann's pika (O. hoffmanni)
  • Northern pika (O. hyperborea)
  • Manchurian pika (O. mantchurica)
  • Kazakh pika (O. opaca)
  • Pallas's pika (O. pallasi)
  • American pika (O. princeps)
  • Turuchan pika (O. turuchanensis)
  • Subgenus Ochotona: Gansu pika (O. cansus)
  • Plateau pika (O. curzoniae)
  • Daurian pika (O. dauurica)
  • Nubra pika (O. nubrica)
  • Steppe pika (O. pusilla)
  • Qionglai pika (O. qionglaiensis)
  • Afghan pika (O. rufescens)
  • Sijin pika (O. sikimaria)
  • Tsing-ling pika (O. syrinx)
  • Moupin pika (O. thibetana)
  • Thomas's pika (O. thomasi)
  • Subgenus Conothoa: Chinese red pika (O. erythrotis)
  • Forrest's pika (O. forresti)
  • Glover's pika (O. gloveri)
  • Ili pika (O. iliensis)
  • Koslov's pika (O. koslowi)
  • Ladak pika (O. ladacensis)
  • Large-eared pika (O. macrotis)
  • Royle's pika (O. roylei)
  • Turkestan red pika (O. rutila)
  • Subgenus Alienauroa: Yellow pika (O. huanglongensis)
  • Sacred pika (O. sacraria)
  • Flat-headed pika (O. flatcalvariam)
Family Leporidae (Rabbits and Hares)
Pentalagus
  • Amami rabbit (P. furnessi)
Bunolagus
  • Riverine rabbit (B. monticularis)
Nesolagus
  • Sumatran striped rabbit (N. netscheri)
  • Annamite striped rabbit (N. timminsi)
Romerolagus
  • Volcano rabbit (R. diazi)
Brachylagus
  • Pygmy rabbit (B. idahoensis)
Sylvilagus
(Cottontail rabbits)
  • Subgenus Tapeti: Andean tapeti (S. andinus)
  • Bogota tapeti (S. apollinaris)
  • Swamp rabbit (S. aquaticus)
  • Common tapeti (S. brasiliensis)
  • Ecuadorian tapeti (S. daulensis)
  • Dice's cottontail (S. dicei)
  • Fulvous tapeti (S. fulvescens)
  • Central American tapeti (S. gabbi)
  • Northern tapeti (S. incitatus)
  • Omilteme cottontail (S. insonus)
  • Nicefor's tapeti (S. nicefori)
  • Marsh rabbit (S. palustris)
  • Suriname tapeti (S. parentum)
  • Colombian tapeti (S. salentus)
  • Santa Marta tapeti (S. sanctaemartae)
  • Western tapeti (S. surdaster)
  • Coastal tapeti (S. tapetillus)
  • Venezuelan lowland rabbit (S. varynaensis)
  • Subgenus Sylvilagus: Desert cottontail (S. audubonii)
  • Mexican cottontail (S. cunicularis)
  • Eastern cottontail (S. floridanus)
  • Tres Marias rabbit (S. graysoni)
  • Mountain cottontail (S. nuttallii)
  • Appalachian cottontail (S. obscurus)
  • Robust cottontail (S. holzneri)
  • New England cottontail (S. transitionalis)
  • Subgenus Microlagus: Brush rabbit (S. bachmani)
Oryctolagus
  • European rabbit (O. cuniculus)
Poelagus
  • Bunyoro rabbit (P. marjorita)
Pronolagus
(Red rock hares)
  • Natal red rock hare (P. crassicaudatus)
  • Jameson's red rock hare (P. randensis)
  • Smith's red rock hare (P. rupestris)
  • Hewitt's red rock hare (P. saundersiae)
Caprolagus
  • Hispid hare (C. hispidus)
Lepus
(Hares)
  • Subgenus Macrotolagus: Antelope jackrabbit (L. alleni)
  • Subgenus Poecilolagus: Snowshoe hare (L. americanus)
  • Subgenus Lepus: Arctic hare (L. arcticus)
  • Alaskan hare (L. othus)
  • Mountain hare (L. timidus)
  • Subgenus Proeulagus:
  • Black jackrabbit (L. insularis)
  • Desert hare (L. tibetanus)
  • Tolai hare (L. tolai)
  • Subgenus Eulagos: Broom hare (L. castroviejoi)
  • Yunnan hare (L. comus)
  • Korean hare (L. coreanus)
  • European hare (L. europaeus)
  • Manchurian hare (L. mandshuricus)
  • Ethiopian highland hare (L. starcki)
  • Subgenus Sabanalagus: Ethiopian hare (L. fagani)
  • African savanna hare (L. victoriae)
  • Subgenus Indolagus: Hainan hare (L. hainanus)
  • Indian hare (L. nigricollis)
  • Burmese hare (L. peguensis)
  • Subgenus Sinolagus: Chinese hare (L. sinensis)
  • Subgenus Tarimolagus: Yarkand hare (L. yarkandensis)
  • Subgenus incertae sedis: Tamaulipas jackrabbit (L. altamirae)
  • Japanese hare (L. brachyurus)
  • Black-tailed jackrabbit (L. californicus)
  • White-sided jackrabbit (L. callotis)
  • Cape hare (L. capensis)
  • Corsican hare (L. corsicanus)
  • Tehuantepec jackrabbit (L. flavigularis)
  • Granada hare (L. granatensis)
  • Abyssinian hare (L. habessinicus)
  • Woolly hare (L. oiostolus)
  • Scrub hare (L. saxatilis)
  • White-tailed jackrabbit (L. townsendii)
Taxon identifiers
Lepus peguensis