Restoring Our Native Cottontail
By Beth Comery for the Providence Daily Dose
The rare New England cottontail, a species of native rabbit* once abundant in these parts, is getting some much needed help from the NE Cottontail Captive Breeding Program.
As of October 2015, conservationists had
released 118 captive-bred New England cottontails, 71 of them in Rhode Island
and 47 in New Hampshire. One important release site is Patience Island, a brushy, 210-acre uninhabited island in
Rhode Island’s Narragansett Bay. As this island population grows and thrives,
it will become a key source for restocking other areas throughout the species’
range.
PBS has been airing “Remarkable
Rabbits” from its Nature series. It features Lou Perrotti, director of
conservation programs at the Roger Williams Park Zoo, coordinating with Heidi
Holman, of New Hampshire Fish and Game. She is shown picking up some young
cottontails from the zoo for release into the wild.Heidi brings the new cottontails to an acclimation pen;
it is electrified, hence the ‘Acme Fence Co.’ sign.
I can not recommend this show enough!
(Streaming expires on May 3.) In addition to the amazing footage of hares and
rabbits in the wild (their kooky mating ritual is called “cavorting”) the show
also goes to the American
Rabbit Breeders Association convention with its 5o recognized breeds.
The 100th ARBA Convention takes place in Kentucky in October. I want to go.
*The New England cottontail is not the same
species as the now-common Eastern cottontail. From the RWP
Zoo cottontail page:
In the 1930s, the non-native Eastern
cottontail was introduced from Missouri primarily to benefit hunters when the
native cottontail populations began to decline. While the non-native Eastern
cottontail population is widespread and abundant, the native New England
cottontail has declined perilously since that time.
Biologists at URI estimate that Patience Island now supports a
population of 60 to 170 breeding New England cottontails.
(The ProJo first wrote about the program in 2014.)