376 



THE RODENTS OR GNAWING ANIMALS. 



Change of the "When the Alps are buried in snow 

 Fur of the Alpine in December this Hare is as purely 

 Hare. white as the snow itself, only the 



tips of the ears remaining black. The spring sun- 

 shine induces a very remarkable change of color, 

 this change beginning in March. The animal first 

 becomes dark on the back, and gray hairs appear 

 more and more numerously amid the white of the 

 flanks. In April it has a queer, pie-bald appearance. 

 The dark brown hue gains more ground every day, 

 and finally in May the change is complete, the color 

 being uniform and not mottled like that of the Com- 



and crannies that the spectator can not long remain 

 concealed from the alert animals, or have an oppor- 

 tunity to observe for any length of time their domei^- 

 tic routine. 

 The Alpine Hare "A surprising fact is that the Alpine 

 Easily Domes- Hare is more tamable than the Com- 

 ticated. mon Hare; it behaves more quietly 



and shows greater confidence, but seldom endures 

 long and fails to get fat even with the most abun- 

 dant nourishment. It misses in the valley below the 

 rarefied air of the upper Alps. It turns white in 

 winter in confinement also. Its fur is not valuable, 



but 



is very 



THE ALFIN£ HAB£, This animal with its white winter coat is a very appropriate inhabitant of the snowy 



regions of the Alps. In the summer the coat is dark brown, but in winter it is all white except the margins of the ears. 

 These are very pretty creatures, agile, easily frightened, and always active. {Le^tts timidus.) 



mon Hare, the fur of which is of a coarser texture 

 than that of the Alpine Hare. In autumn the first 

 white hairs appear with the first snow; but as winter 

 reaches its climax in less time than does spring in 

 the Alps, the change is wrought more rapidly, and 

 is completed sometime during the period extending 

 from the beginning of October to the middle of 

 November. When the Chamois becomes black, 

 its neighbor, the Hare, turns white. The Alpine 

 Hare is commonly found in all the higher Alpine 

 regions, where it is at least as numerous as is the 

 brown Hare in the lower belt. Its favorite country 

 lies between the point at which the fir-trees cease to 

 grow and the line of perpetual snow, at about the 

 same altitude as is favored by the Snow-Hen or 

 Ptarmigan and the Marmot, from 4,800 to 7,800 feet 

 above the sea; it may sometimes range much higher, 

 however. 



"The female gives birth to from two 

 to five young, which are no larger 

 than Mice and have a white spot on 

 The first litter usually appears in 

 April or May, the second in July or August; there 

 are doubts as to whether there is a third. It is 

 nearly impossible to observe their family life, as the 

 power of scent of these animals is so delicate and 

 the young know so well how to hide in all crevices 



its flesh 

 toothsome.' 



The Rabbit {Lepus cuni- 

 culus) differs from the 

 Hares proper in its much 

 smaller physical propor- 

 tions — a more slender 

 frame, shorter head, 

 shorter ears and shorter 

 hind legs. The length 

 of the body of the ani- 

 mal is sixteen inches, 

 nearly three inches of 

 which are occupied by 

 the tail. The ear is 

 shorter than the head 

 and if pressed forward 

 and downward along the 

 cheek it does not reach 

 to the point of the muz- 

 zle. The tail is black 

 above, white beneath, 

 and the remainder of 

 the body is covered by 

 a gray fur, dashed with 

 yellow-brown above, 

 reddish yellow in front, 

 light rusty on the flanks 

 and thighs and merging 

 into white on the under 

 surface, the throat and 

 the inner sides of the 

 the throat is of a rusty 



Original 



Home of the 



Rabbit. 



The Propagation 



of Alpine 



Hares. 



the forehead. 



limbs. The upper part of 



yellow grayish hue, the nape of the neck is palpably 

 of a rusty red color. Variations in coloration seem 

 to occur more rarely than with the Common Hare. 

 Nearly all naturalists suppose the 

 original home of the Rabbit to be 

 southern Europe and that it was 

 introduced by transplantation into all portions of 

 Europe north of the Alps. Pliny mentions it under 

 the name of Cuniculus, Aristotle calls it Dasypus. 

 All old authors name Spain as its native country. 

 Present At present the wild Rabbit is dis- 

 Range of the tributed throughout southern and 

 Rabbit. central Europe and is quite plentiful 



in some places. The countries of the Mediterranean 

 al-e infested by the species in enormous numbers, 

 though it is pursued there all the year round and 

 spared in none of the seasons. In England it was 

 introduced into several localities for sporting pur- 

 poses and was held in high esteem at first; as late as 

 1309 a wild Rabbit cost as much as a little Pig. In 

 northern countries it does not thrive. Attempts to 

 introduce it into Russia and Sweden have been futile- 

 , Requisites for The Rabbit requires for its domicile 

 the Rabbit's a hilly and sandy country, broken 

 Domicile. by ravines, rocks and shrulabery, in 

 short, offering sheltered spots where it can hide it- 



