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New strain of RHDV in SA
A new strain of RHDV (the rabbit calicivirus) is now on the move in South...
Get them while they’re down
Advice for landholders to control rabbits while their numbers are low after a dry summer....
Fewer rabbits > fewer feral predators > more small mammals
Amazing increases in the distribution and occurrence of the dusky hopping mouse, plains mouse and...
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Blog Posts
Rabbit, feral cat & fox control. A springboard to landscape recovery.
The problem The 2021 State of the Environment report (Australian government) notes that rabbits affect...
Genetics help paint a picture. Rabbits across Australia.
Blog: Brian Cooke & Bruce Munday. Featured image: Ron Sinclair. Chasing the DNA trail has...
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.
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