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Mating and parental care in captive pygmy rabbits

Citation

Lisa A Shipley, Rodney D Sayler, Rachel S Lamson, and Becky A Elias, Mating and parental care in captive pygmy rabbits: .

Summary

As part of a captive-breeding program to restore extirpated Columbia Basin pygmy rabbits (Brachylagus idahoensis) to their native habitat in Washington, we documented mating and parental care behavior of these lagomorphs, which was previously unknown. Pygmy rabbits bred from late February through early June, and mating behavior consisted of chasing and brief copulations. Although presented with 1–4 mating partners and 1–6 mating opportunities annually, only 74% of females became pregnant each year. Unlike other lagomorphs, females dug a 16- to 35-cm natal burrow, usually separate from the residential burrow system, an average of 13 days after a successful copulation. Twenty-four days after copulation, females gave birth to 2–7 [...]

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  • Upper Colorado River Basin

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From Source - Mendeley RIS export <br> On - Tue May 10 12:09:41 CDT 2011

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Title Citation Mating and parental care in captive pygmy rabbits

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