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Are members of the genera Caprolagus and Pronolagus true hares? It seems that Pronolagus, in particular, are called 'Red Rockhares' at times and 'Red Rabbits' at other times.
Edededed 00:24, 15 Oct 2003 (UTC)
Just wanted to notify anyone concerned that the linkhttp://www.alienexplorer.com/ecology/m101.html is gone.
I removed the following sentence: "The word 'hare' refers to large members of the familyLeporidae only," since it has been orphaned from its original context when it was first added in the 15:36 edit on the date 7 Aug 2003. The language was already perhaps a bit vague, but became even more so when its preceding sentence was replaced in the 18:32 edit on 2 April, 2004. Eventually, through subsequent editing, the sentence was quite unrelated to the rest of the paragraph.
Instead of moving the sentence to a new paragraph I chose to remove the sentence and archive it here because I am unsure as to the sentence's intent. I think the original contributor meant that the term "hare," while having a scientific definition, is often used colloquially to refer to any large member of the familyLeporidae. I could not locate documentary proof of this assertion, despite my agreement with the assertion on anecdotal grounds. I felt it best to remove a potentially confusing sentence, and I was not confident enough in my interpretation of the original contributor's intent to edit the passage to a more clear meaning.
Maybe a disambiguation page is in order for the animal hare, a hare-lip, various people called hare, etc?
It's similar to rabbits'.... but that doesn't mean it shouldn't be included in this article!pomegranate 00:27, Apr 20, 2005 (UTC)
What evidence do we actually have that Bugs Bunny is a jackrabbit? That sounds like speculation to me. He gets called a "hare" in the cartoons (usually to make a pun), but he also gets called a "rabbit" quite a lot. I'm not sure we can assume that he's supposed to be any particular species. His long ears and gangly legs suggest a hare, but could just be cartoonish exaggeration.
someone needs to find a diagram of a rabbit and put it in here!
Just wanted to point out that I added a bit of information from my own research on the Proto-Indo-European culture about hares. Hope it helps a little.—The precedingunsigned comment was added bySeadog driftwood (talk •contribs) .
The article lacks information at present on the hare as a food (jugged hare, etc.). --Picapica19:40, 12 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
The Muslim dietary law comments need to be re-written for clarity. Mentioning a difference of practice without specifics is simply "not encyclopedic." Also, some explanation of "halal" is required.— Precedingunsigned comment added by68.97.87.243 (talk)04:28, 5 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Can rabbits and hares interbreed and produce viable offspring?Drutt05:56, 25 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]
It makes absolutely no sense to redirect to this page the link for Hare-Rabbit hybrids from the mammal hybrids link summary thing (I don't know what it's called here, but it shows at the bottom of pages on hybrids, such as the Mule page) when there is absolutely no information regarding such hybrids on this page. The redirection should be removed (which I don't know how to do) so the link shows properly red as a page that has not yet been created.
Cadrac (talk)02:50, 6 May 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Do people orthodoxly eat hares as they do rabbits?--Jeff Bongi03:57, 18 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Jackrabbit andjack rabbit are redirects to the accompanying articlehare, but not all hares are jackrabbits, and it seems more reasonable to make "jackrabbit" the Dab (and "jack rabbit" a Rdr to it), and have a group of entries on the Dab for the various species. (Each article should of course lk tohare, accomplishing everything the current Rdrs do. I'm doing Dab-Cleanup onJack rabbit (disambiguation), which i'll move to "jackrabbit" before making the additions i'm talking about. I'm proceedingBOLDly w/o waiting for discussion, anticipating that anything that i'm missing can be fixed later.
--Jerzy•t05:12, 11 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
It might be good if the article had a discussion on the use of hare fur, and whether harvest always or typically involves death or injury to the animal. —SlamDiego←T23:08, 15 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
This expression deserves mention. Sure, it basically means the same thing as "mad as a March hare" (i.e. as crazy as a jackrabbit in spring)...but even so.Qit el-Remel (talk •contribs)20:12, 30 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Under differences from rabbits, this article states: "The hare's diet is similar to the rabbit's. They are both in the order Lagomorpha." How are these differences? Isn't much of a paragraph either as these sentences don't really relate to one another (other than being examples of how hares and rabbits are similar).— Precedingunsigned comment added by192.158.61.141 (talk)20:19, 22 March 2012 (UTC)[reply]
At the top of this talk page is a somewhat circular discussion, going like "The only true hare genus isLepus because all true hares are members of the genusLepus".
Currently all genera in theLeporidae family (which, we are told there, is formed by species of rabbits and hares) are listed either in the taxobox atRabbit or in the taxobox atHare, with two exceptions: the generaCaprolagus andPronolagus. I see no particularly valid reason to handle these genera as homeless orphans. Using the true-genus logic one could declare with equal validity that the only true rabbit genus isOryctolagus because all true rabbits are members of the genusOryctolagus and insist that all non-Oryctolagus stuff be removed from theRabbit page. --Lambiam14:03, 17 September 2012 (UTC)[reply]
This article states, "Four species with 'hare' in their common names are not considered true hares: the hispid hare (Caprolagus hispidus), and three species known as red rock hares (Pronolagus spp.)." However, this should presumably be increased to five, since according to the Wikipedia page on springhares (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pedetes), they are not true hares either, since they are rodents. If someone is more knowledgeable about this than I am, could you make the change or explain why not?74.71.69.7 (talk)03:34, 5 May 2015 (UTC)[reply]
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Right now it's described as a myth based on a 1984 article in nature that claims that it's a female-male thing. However when I looked this up I found it was followed by a letter (Nature, 02/1987, Volume 325, Issue 6106) contradicting this and defending the idea that boxing is competition among the males, citing some sources including a German publication. Opinions?Spiny Norman (talk)11:18, 20 January 2017 (UTC)[reply]
" in Australia, where the hare is hunted as a feral pest " -- the Hare has never been a problem here, and aren't "illegal" in any state, so I doubt this claim. They aren't as destructive as Rabbits, don't overpopulate like rabbits, etc.
https://www.logan.qld.gov.au/rabbits-hares -- "Hares are not a declared pest. There is no legal requirement to manage hares."— Precedingunsigned comment added by1.145.51.238 (talk)10:23, 11 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]
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curprev 13:07, 11 August 2019 Strebe talk contribs 22,143 bytes +30 Japanese archipelago has had no land connection to mainland over geological time. British isles have no hare species exclusive to themselves. Undid revision 910371814 by Khajidha (talk) undothank Tags: Undo, PHP7curprev 12:36, 11 August 2019 Khajidha talk contribs 22,113 bytes -30 →top: why would it be necessary to split the Japanese archipelago from Eurasia but not do the same for the British Isles? undo
While I understand the point Strebe is making here, I feel that specifying the Japanese archipelago in this sentence is overly exact for a simple overview sentence in the lead. --Khajidha (talk)17:56, 15 August 2019 (UTC)[reply]
I made someedits and they were immediately reverted byUser:Strebe.
My intention with these edits was to make explicit the fact that "hare" is a common language term, which issometimes but not always considered an exact synonym for the scientific classificationLepus.
I think we should create separate pages forLepus and forHare, to resolve this ambiguity. The term hare clearly does not refer exclusively to the genusLepus (e.g. thehispid hare is in a different genus), and the genusLepus clearly contains species not known as hares (e.g. jackrabbits). Both of these examples are mentioned in the article, but the article simultaneously treats hare and lepus as synonyms, which makes the topic very unclear.
I propose moving this article toLepus, and creating a newHare article which describes the uses of "hare" as a common term. Alternatively this article could be edited to refer to the common term only, and a newLepus article created instead.
Averixus (talk)10:02, 2 February 2022 (UTC)[reply]
Another option (instead of creating a new separate Hare article) would be simply to modify the existing Hare (disambiguation) page. Instead of the current "a hare is a mammal closely related to the rabbit", it could be rephrased to something like "hare is a term for several types of mammals in the Leporidae family", followed by a list that could includeLepus,Caprolagus,belgian hare, etc. The current article could then be moved toLepus with relatively minor changes to phrasing.
Averixus (talk)15:56, 2 February 2022 (UTC)[reply]
"Hares, like all leporids, have jointed, or kinetic, skulls, unique among mammals." This sentence appears in the section on the differences between hares and rabbits. Given that rabbits are leporids, it would seem to follow that this is not a difference between hares and rabbits, and if so, it surely doesn't belong here. Am I misunderstanding something?MicroProf (talk)01:09, 19 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
It says that hares have 48 chromosomes and rabbits have 44, and the sources are behind a paywall. Did they verify that that's true for *every* species of rabbit and hare? I'm worried they only checked one and it's not a reliable difference at all. The title of the article doesn't specify a species of rabbit. Looking for one not behind a paywall I foundthis, which has a similar title but only looks at rabbits of a specific breed. —DanielLC03:36, 23 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]