THE MAMMALS
MARIPOSA BRUSH RABBIT Sylvilagus bachmani mariposae Grinnell
and Storer
Field characters.General
appearance much like that of small domestic rabbit; ears shorter than
head (fig. 35a), half as broad as long; tail short, white of tail
much restricted. Head and body 10 to 12-1/2 inches (255-315 mm.), tail 1
to 1-1/4 inches (25-32 mm.), hind foot 2-2/3 to 3 inches (68-75 mm.), ear
(from crown of head) 2-1/2 to 3-1/8 inches (65-80 mm.); weight 17-1/2 to
22 ounces (500-631 grams). Coloration dark brown with heavy overwash of
black; general effect of coloration deep gray rather than brown; under
side of body grayish white; under side of tail white. Workings:
Paths or run ways 2-1/2 to 3 inches wide, on ground beneath chaparral.
Droppings: Flattened spheres about 1/4 inch in diameter,
scattered on ground at feeding places and along runways.
Occurrence.Common
resident in foothill region (Upper Sonoran Zone) on west slope of Sierra
Nevada. Recorded from Lagrange and Pleasant Valley eastward to El Portal
(to altitude of 4000 feet on south facing mountain side immediately
north of El Portal). Lives on ground beneath chaparral, seldom venturing
into the open. Seen actively abroad at dusk of evening and
morning.
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Fig. 35. Heads of (a) Mariposa
Brush Rabbit and (b) Sacramento Cottontail Rabbit; one-half
natural size. See pp. 227, 228.
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Smallest in point of size among the rabbits of the
Yosemite section is the Mariposa Brush Rabbit of the western foothill
country. Hunters refer to this as the "blue rabbit" because of its
distinctly bluish gray cast of coloration in contrast with the brownish
tones of the cottontail. The average visitor will be likely to see more
of the cottontail and jack rabbit than of the brush rabbit, as the
former species forage generally in rather open situations, while the
latter habitually keeps close beneath the chaparral, even when foraging,
and, moreover, is to be seen as a rule only in the early morning and in
late evening.
In general form and appearance the brush rabbit
resembles the cottontail, to which it is not distantly related. The two
species are 'rabbits' in the restricted sense of the word, in that their
young are hairless at birth and are born in sheltered nests of some
sort, and in that the adults browse close to cover and when frightened
seek safety beneath shrubbery or in holes rather than in flight as do
the hares (jack rabbits).
The brush rabbit is about half the weight of a
cottontail and measures, on the average, smaller in all dimensions than
that species. The ear of the brush rabbit is shorter than the head; its
greatest length, as measured from the crown of the head, is only about
twice its width. (See fig. 35.) The head of the brush rabbit is blunter
and broader as compared with that of the cottontail, and the tail is
smaller and shows less white. There is a conspicuously darker, colder,
grayish tone of coloration in the brush rabbit, which is to be
contrasted with the yellowish brown coat color of the cottontail.
In general the deportment of the Mariposa Brush
Rabbit is like that of its nearer relative. It habitually carries its
ears up in a nearly vertical position. Not infrequently the red tinge of
the ears, resulting from the sunlight shining through them, is the first
thing to catch the observer's eye. Usually, when suddenly come upon, a
brush rabbit will 'freeze' and remain perfectly still; under such
circumstances it might easily be mistaken for a rock. When it decides
to move it does so abruptly and a few jumps place it under the shadow of
the chaparral. There the observer's eye can scarcely follow it, so
closely does the color of the animal's pelage match the general tone of
the environment; with a few further scurrying movements the rabbit is
entirely lost to view. This animal is an adept at dodging about in and
among bushes. As long as cover is available, its safety is fairly
assured.
The Mariposa Brush Rabbit does most of its foraging
in the dusk of evening and in the early morning hours. Sundown, whatever
hour that may be in the different seasons of the year, is the best time
to watch for brush rabbits. Then they come out to the margins of the
brush thickets to browse, or go hopping about here and there in the
spaces under the canopy of chaparral. At El Portal, in early December,
they suddenly became active at about 5 P.M.; near Coulterville, in May,
they were not out in the evening until about 7 o'clock. The time of
appearance of the brush rabbit is roughly parallel to that of the
various species of bats. Probably the early hours of the night are spent
in foraging. The early hours of the morning soon after daybreak are also
spent in some activity. In May and June the animals were seen not
infrequently between 5:30 and 6.30 A.M. But soon after they disappeared
for the day.
Individual brush rabbits are localized in their
range. Once having found the haunts of a particular animal, the observer
can be almost certain of finding it there subsequently at the proper
hour. Thus near Coulterville one was sighted one evening in May. Next
morning it was within 5 feet of where it had been seen before, and later
that morning it was again seen close to the same spot.
The Mariposa Brush Rabbits, at least during the fall
months, get much of their forage from the brush plants. The greasewood,
which serves them as shelter, is not ordinarily used for food; but two
other foothill shrubs, the blue brush (Ceanothus cuneatus) and
wild broom (Hosackia glabra), which has a clump of long,
flexible, hay-like stems, are resorted to freely. The rabbits nip off
the stems of these two plants and eat them, discarding the leaves. Much
rabbit sign, indicating repeated visits by the animals, was seen
wherever these plants formed the chief vegetation. In the spring months
grass and other fresh herbage grows about the borders of the chaparral
and the rabbits turn then to this food source. With the food habits just
indicated, and with its timid and retiring disposition, the brush rabbit
is never likely to become the pest to agriculture that the cottontail
is. On the other hand, it is a desirable game animal.
Brush rabbits bring forth their young chiefly during
the early months of the year. Two juvenal animals, taken near
Coulterville on May 11 and 12, 1919, weighed only about one-third as
much as adults and were in the dusky-hued first pelage. To judge from
the growth of domestic rabbits these animals were probably not over six
weeks old when found by us, and so had been born in the later part of
March. These youngsters, however, were already out and foraging
independently at the margin of the chaparral, just as adults are wont to
do. A female, giving evidence of suckling young, was taken 3 miles east
of Coulterville on June 1, 1915.
Several of the local carnivorous birds and mammals
are known to prey upon rabbits and this is probably one reason why the
Mariposa Brush Rabbit keeps so closely to the cover of the chaparral.
The presence of these natural enemies, and the limited forage available
to the brush rabbit, are two factors which serve to keep down the
numbers of the species.
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