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Less rabbit baiting following RHDV
The use of poisoned oats to control wild rabbits has decreased in South Australia, following...
Turretfield comes up trumps
‘Rabbit histories’, tracking the mortality of over 4,000 rabbits, are now available from a long-term...
Are bilbies hard-wired to avoid dingoes?
Bilbies may be more likely to avoid dingoes than cats, if their reaction to dog...
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Blog Posts
Who rules the burrow?
Social hierarchies in rabbits are not so unlike what you would find in a period drama. These social machinations are an ingenious way to give the next generation a genetic advantage. The fittest animals become dominant and produce by far the most offspring, while the risks of inbreeding are neatly sidestepped by having the boys leave home while the girls mostly stay.
Dingoes, rabbits & diseases
Dingoes have been promoted as a means to suppress rabbits, but history tells a different story. It seems dingoes and diseases like RHDV can hold rabbit numbers in some circumstances, but dingoes alone cannot suppress rabbits well enough to prevent continuing ecological damage.
Insights about Covid-19 from rabbit bio-control
When RHDV first appeared in Australia it spread poorly amongst young rabbits with little affect on them. However a later variant, RHDV2 is recognised as spreading amongst young rabbits. When Covid-19 initially spread, it rarely affected children. Could it follow the same path as RHDV?
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