PICAS AND HARES. 
199 
the opposite bank in safety. Rabbits, from their numbers, do even more damage 
to young plantations than is inflicted by hares. The chief foes of these animals are 
weasels, stoats, and polecats, which either hunt them in the open, or attack them 
within the recesses of their subterranean haunts; the curious kind of paralysis 
which seems to seize the rabbit when pursued by one of these carnivores has been 
already mentioned under the heading of the stoat. 
Distribution Although now widely distributed, it is believed that the original 
home of the rabbit was in the countries on both sides of the western 
portion of the Mediterranean, where it is still abundant at the present day. Thence 
it is considered to have spread northwards, and to have reached England and 
Ireland by human agency. In Scotland it has increased and spread enormously of 
late years, having been formerly but sparsely distributed, and unknown in the 
more northern parts of the country. On the continent its distribution is somewhat 
local; and it is unknown in the more northern and eastern parts of Europe. It 
should be observed that remains of rabbits occur in the caves of England in 
company with those of the mammoth and other extinct mammals, which would 
seem at first sight to disprove the view that these rodents are immigrants from the 
south. It is, however, quite probable that the association of the remains of the 
rabbit with those of extinct mammals may be due to its burrowing habits. 
. The rabbit has been introduced by human agency into several 
In All STTfl.lfl.Ri3, O t/ 
countries beyond Europe, where it has flourished and multiplied to 
a degree beyond conception;—so much so, indeed, that in Australia and New 
Zealand these animals have become a perfect pest and a serious hindrance to 
agriculture. Rabbits were first introduced at the period of the highest prosperity 
of Australia and New South Wales by a patriotic gentleman who thought it would be 
a good thing to import a few rabbits into the colony, as they would serve for food 
and for sport. He accordingly imported three couple of rabbits, and they were 
turned loose. It was not long before it was found that the district in question had 
been transformed into a gigantic rabbit warren. Indeed it was discovered that a 
single pair of rabbits, under favourable circumstances, would in three years have a 
progeny numbering 13,718,000. The inhabitants of the colony soon found that 
the rabbits were a plague, for they devoured the grass, which was needed for 
the sheep, the bark of trees, and every kind of fruit and vegetables, until the 
prospect of the colony became a very serious matter, and ruin seemed inevitable. 
In New South Wales upwards of fifteen million rabbit skins have been exported 
in a single year; while in the thirteen years ending with 1889 no less than thirty- 
nine millions were accounted for in Victoria alone. To prevent the increase of 
these rodents, the introduction of weasels, stoats, mungooses, etc., has been tried; 
but it has been found that these carnivores neglected the rabbits and took to 
feeding on poultry, and thus became as great a nuisance as the animals they were 
intended to destroy. The attempt to kill them off by the introduction of an 
epidemic disease has also failed. In order to protect such portions of the country 
as are still free from rabbits fences of wire-netting have been erected; one of these 
fences erected by the Government of Victoria extending for a distance of upwards 
of one hundred and fifty geographical miles. In New Zealand, where the rabbit 
has been introduced little more than twenty years, its increase has been so 
