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Jackrabbits | Jackrabbit Overview | Jackrabbit Damage Assessment | Jackrabbit Damage Management | Jackrabbit Acknowledgments | Jackrabbit Resources | ICWDM | Wildlife Species Information |
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Bibliography and Print Resources
Dunn, J. P., J. A. Chapman, and R. E. Marsh. 1982. Jackrabbits. Pages 124-145 in J. A. Chapman and G. A. Feldhamer, eds. Wild mammals of North America: biology, management, and economics. The Johns Hopkins Univ. Press, Baltimore.
Evans, J., P. L. Hegdal, and R. E. Griffith, Jr. 1982. Wire fencing for controlling jackrabbit damage. Univ. Idaho. Coop. Ext. Serv. Bull. No. 618. 7 pp.
Johnston, J. C. 1978. Anticoagulant baiting for jackrabbit control. Proc. Vertebr. Pest Conf. 8:152-153.
Lechleitner, R. R. 1958. Movements, density, and mortality in a black-tailed jackrabbit population. J. Wildl. Manage. 22:371-384.
Palmer, T. S. 1987. Jackrabbits of the U.S. US Dep. Agric. Biol. Survey Bull. 8:1-88
Schwartz, C. W., and E. R. Schwartz. 1981. The wild mammals of Missouri. Univ. Missouri Press, Columbia. 356 pp.
Taylor W. P., C. T. Vorhies, and P. B. Lister 1935. The relation of jackrabbits to grazing in southern Arizona. J. For. 33:490-493.
US Department of the Interior. 1973. Controlling rabbits. US Fish Wildl. Serv. Bull. 2 pp.
Vorhies, C. T., and W. P. Taylor. 1933. The life histories and ecology of jackrabbits, Lepus alleni and Lepus californicus sp. in relation to grazing in Arizona. Univ. Arizona Agric. Exp. Stn. Tech. Bull. 49:467-587.
Images and Illustrations
Figure 1 of the snowshoe hare by Clint E. Chapman, University of Nebraska.
Figure 2 adapted by David Thornhill, from Burt and Grossenheider (1976).
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Jackrabbits | Jackrabbit Overview | Jackrabbit Damage Assessment | Jackrabbit Damage Management | Jackrabbit Acknowledgments | Jackrabbit Resources | ICWDM | Wildlife Species Information |
Contact Information

This website is based on the handbook for PREVENTION AND CONTROL OF WILDLIFE DAMAGE. Please visit our website to find out more information about this invaluable resource and to find out how you can participate in the Wildlife Damage Management community.