Innis Arden Photo by Bill Schnall |
Lake Forest Park Photo by Brad Lichetenstein |
First there was a message on a social media site about a woman who found a "giant" rabbit in her front yard. She said the rabbit was not afraid of her at all.
A couple of days later, Bill Schnall found a large rabbit in Innis Arden. Then the next day Brad Lichtenstein found a rabbit in Lake Forest Park.
The rabbits have been in Hamlin Park for a long time. Now they are in Innis Arden in west Shoreline, and Lake Forest Park on the east side.
They breed like, well, rabbits. And they take over and eat everything in their path. Remember Farmer McGregor?
What I don't quite understand is why the coyotes, who are also all over the place, haven't wiped out the bunny population.
I'm afraid it's because domestic cats are much easier prey. Maybe if we all kept our cats inside, the wild animals would stay in balance.
DKH
The balance ebbs and flows. If the rabbits overwinter well there is an explosion in spring and fall. The predators will have a great summer and a good portion of their babies will survive. Then the predators will overfeed on the prey, the rabbit populations diminishes, and then predators follow suit through lack of available food and their offspring not surviving/less being born. The prey has another good winter and explodes, and so on and so on... The circle of life.
ReplyDeletePeople may also be noticing more rabbits due to the usual after-Easter dumping of domesticated rabbits. It's unfortunately very common for irresponsible owners to dump/abandon their rabbits in the open, thinking that they can survive like wild rabbits (which is untrue, usually this is a death sentence for most domesticated breeds). For the woman that saw the "giant" rabbit who was not afraid - that doesn't sound at all like any of the wild breeds native to WA. I'm glad that the pictures do seem to be of wild rabbits. Large spikes of dumping happen after Easter, when people realize how much work their new rabbit is, and decide they don't want it.
ReplyDeleteI've seen wild bunnies here in Ridgecrest too.
ReplyDeleteSpeaking of the Circle of Life: yes, let the natural systems operate as they will, and perhaps the cat people would stop injecting their cats into the circle, as they do great harm and do not belong there.
ReplyDeleteA better question is why don't people take care of pet rabbits responsibly when they don't want them anymore? Better yet, don't get rabbits as Easter presents.
ReplyDeleteThe population of rabbits in Hamlin is low at the moment because a rescue group live trapped a bunch of them late last fall. There are still dozens of rabbits in Fircrest. It will not take long to replace the population removed.
And to be sure, these are feral animals, not wildlife. They are an invasive species.
Other localities have had difficulty removing feral rabbits. Whidbey Island was overrun, Lower Woodland Park had the same problem. Las Vegas has been overrun in some neighborhoods.
There is a pair of black & white domestic rabbits running around Twin Ponds.
ReplyDeleteIt's now July and there seem to be many more rabbits. They are everywhere, eating everything. They appear to be afraid of nothing. I see them all over Meridian Park. Is it the construction that has driven them into our neighborhood? Is it the heat? Hard to have a garden this year.
ReplyDelete