Amami rabbit

Amami rabbit

Order : Lagomorpha
Family : Leporidae
Species : Pentalagus furnessi

 

The Amami rabbit, ryukyu rabbit is listed as Endangered (EN), considered to be facing a very high risk of extinction in the wild, on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species

Namings for the Amami rabbit
A young / baby of a Amami rabbit is called a 'bunny, kit, kitten, leveret or nestling'. The females are called 'doe or jill' and males 'buck or jack'. A Amami rabbit group is called a 'warren, nest, colony, bevy, bury, drove or trace'.
Countries
Japan

Facts about the Amami rabbit

Amami Rabbit or Pentalagus furnessi is listed on the IUCN Red list (1996) as Endangered due to A2b, B1+2bce, C1.

In Japan, the Amami rabbit (Pentalagus furnessi) is known to live on two islands covered in old growth forests. (Full text)

Abstract: The Amami rabbit Pentalagus furnessi is a rare forest-dwelling form endemic to the Amami and Tokuno Islands in Japan.

Present Status and Conservation of the Endangered Amami Rabbit Pentalagus furnessi Fumio YAMADA & Ken SUGIMURA Forestry and Forest Products Research Institute, PO Box 16, Tsukuba Norin, Ibaraki 305-8687, Japan Shintaro ABE & Yukari HANDA Mammalogical Society of Amami, Tatsugo,Ohshima, Kagoshima 894-0105, Japan ABSTRACT The Amami rabbit Pentalagus furnessi is an endemic species of the central Ryukyus, Japan, and occurs only on two islands, Amami Oshima I.

Often called a 'living fossil,' the Amami Rabbit is a living remnant of ancient rabbits that once lived on the Asian mainland, where they died out, remaining only on the two small islands where they survive today.

The Amami Rabbit is a short-eared, black primitive species of rabbit which is found nowhere else in the world but two islands in Japan, the Amami Islands in Kagoshima Prefecture.

Nocturnal and forest-dwelling, with short ears and no tail, the Amami rabbit is a very distant relative of the bunnies we know, separated by millions of years of evolution.

Amami Rabbits are also noted for making calling noises, which sound something like the call of a pika (most rabbits cannot make calling noises). (Full text)

Amami Rabbits are also noted for making calling noises, which sound something like the call of a pika; this makes them unique as most rabbits cannot make calling noises.

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