Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Cape hare

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Kingdom
  
Order
  
Genus
  
Lepus

Higher classification
  
Hare

Phylum
  
Chordata

Family
  
Scientific name
  
Lepus capensis

Rank
  
Species

Cape hare Cape hare videos photos and facts Lepus capensis ARKive

Similar
  
Hare, Mammal, Scrub hare, Leporids, Granada hare

marisa s family and other animals cape hare


The Cape hare (Lepus capensis), also called brown hare and desert hare is a hare native to Africa and Arabia extending into India.

Contents

Cape hare Cape Hare Lepus capensis iNaturalistorg

cape hare


Characteristics

Cape hare Cape hare photo Lepus capensis G130246 ARKive

The Cape Hare is a typical hare, with well-developed legs for leaping and running, and large eyes and ears to look out for threats from its environment. There is usually a white ring around the eye. It has a fine, soft coat which varies in colour from light brown to reddish to sandy grey. Unusually among mammals, the female is larger than the male; this phenomenon is called sexual dimorphism.

Habitat

It inhabits macchia-type vegetation, grassland, bushveld, and semi-desert areas.

Ecology

Cape hare CalPhotos Lepus capensis Cape Hare

The Cape Hare is a nocturnal herbivore, feeding on grass and various shrubs. Coprophagy, the consumption of an organism's own fecal material to double the amount of time food spends in the digestive tract, is a common behaviour amongst rabbits and hares. This habit allows the animal to extract the maximum nourishment from its diet, and microbes present in the pellets also provide nutrients.

Cape hare cdn2arkiveorgmediaE1E1A769B44A7842379CDA1

Like other hares, they run fast. The only predator which is capable of outrunning them is the cheetah. All other predators are ambush and/or opportunistic hunters; examples of these are leopards, caracals, and black-backed jackals.

Cape hare capehare2327wjpg

After a 42-day-long pregnancy, the female gives birth to from one to three young, termed leverets, per litter and may have as many as 4 litters per year. A characteristic of hares which differentiates them from rabbits is that the young are born precocial; that is, the young are born with eyes open and are able to move about shortly after birth. The Cape Hare is no exception in this regard.

Taxonomy

Currently, 12 subspecies are recognised:

Cape hare Cape hare photo Lepus capensis G52730 ARKive

  • Lepus capensis capensis
  • Lepus capensis aquilo
  • Lepus capensis carpi
  • Lepus capensis granti
  • Lepus capensis aegyptius
  • Lepus capensis hawkeri
  • Lepus capensis isabellinus
  • Lepus capensis sinaiticus
  • Lepus capensis arabicus
  • Lepus capensis atlanticus
  • Lepus capensis whitakeri
  • Lepus capensis schlumbergi

  • Cape hare MJ Cape hare Tanzania

    References

    Cape hare Wikipedia