Brown Hare - The British Mammal Guide

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  • Опубликовано: 30 сен 2024
  • The Brown Hare - A clip from the British Mammal Guide DVD
    For more information visit - www.isabelline.co.uk

Комментарии • 18

  • @Quagmi
    @Quagmi 3 года назад +8

    I saw a few today in Oxfordshire, chasing each other through some fields about 4:30pm :)

  • @nigelbarrett4091
    @nigelbarrett4091 4 года назад +3

    How did the Irish hare arrive 20,000 years ago before people,according to one Irish video comment ?
    I,d have thought there were people living in Ireland then.
    The hare was featured on one side of the ticky 3p Irish free state coin 1928-49 and in Eire 1949-1968.

  • @erkheth
    @erkheth 3 года назад +2

    When in heat, the does will fight each other

  • @itube0047
    @itube0047 3 года назад +2

    cute little frens :)

  • @nigelbarrett4091
    @nigelbarrett4091 4 года назад +3

    He,s got eyes like Dom at the Foreign office !

  • @yvonnamit7772
    @yvonnamit7772 3 года назад +1

    Hare can be trained to help fight crimes and the baboons as well,you figure it out how you will be surprised I am not nuts.💋♥️

  • @Dragon-Slay3r
    @Dragon-Slay3r 2 года назад

    Snake is behind the hare

  • @stefandolejsi567
    @stefandolejsi567 3 года назад +1

    He lives in the whole midle europe
    (Not only british islands)

  • @factseye9662
    @factseye9662 Год назад

    wowo

  • @indyreno2933
    @indyreno2933 Год назад

    You got the scientific name of the brown hare completely wrong, its correct scientific name is actually Eulagus europaeus.

    • @-TriP-
      @-TriP- 8 месяцев назад

      Eulagos is a subgenus of Lepus, it's not wrong. The subgenus is usually skipped when referring to the scientific name.

    • @indyreno2933
      @indyreno2933 8 месяцев назад

      @-TriP-, nope, the Lepus genus is polyphyletic, there are now only five extant species in this genus: the Mountain Hare (Lepus timidus), the Tibetan Hare (Lepus tibetanus), the Tolai Hare (Lepus tolai), the Yunnan Hare (Lepus comus), and the Himalayan Hare (Lepus oiostolus), while the other thirty-nine extant species are relocated to eight separate genera, Sinolagus for the Yarkand Hare (Sinolagus yarkandensis), the Chinese Hare (Sinolagus sinensis), the Hainan Hare (Sinolagus hainanus), the Formosan Hare (Sinolagus formosanus), the Manchurian Hare (Sinolagus mandshuricus), the Korean Hare (Sinolagus coreanus), and the Japanese Hare (Sinolagus brachyurus), Poecilolagus for the Alaskan Hare (Poecilolagus othus), the Snowshoe Hare (Poecilolagus americanus), and the Arctic Hare (Poecilolagus arcticus), Otolagus for the White-Tailed Jackrabbit (Otolagus townsendii), the Black-Tailed Jackrabbit (Otolagus californicus), and the White-Sided Jackrabbit (Otolagus callotis), Macrotolagus for the Antelope Jackrabbit (Macrotolagus alleni), the Black Jackrabbit (Macrotolagus insularis), and the Tamaulipas Jackrabbit (Macrotolagus altamirae), Ammolagus for only the Tehuantepec Jackrabbit (Ammolagus flavigularis), Eulagus for the Brown Hare (Eulagus europaeus), the Italian Hare (Eulagus italicus), the Corsican Hare (Eulagus corsicanus), the Sardinian Hare (Eulagus mediterraneus), the Granada Hare (Eulagus granatensis), and the Broom Hare (Eulagus castroviejoi), Indolagus for the Pakistani Hare (Indolagus pakistanicus), the Iranian Hare (Indolagus iranensis), the Iraq Hare (Indolagus iraquensis), the Arabian Hare (Indolagus arabicus), the Cyprus Hare (Indolagus cypriotus), the Indian Hare (Indolagus nigricollis), the Sri Lanka Hare (Indolagus singhala), the Burmese Hare (Indolagus peguensis), and the Javan Hare (Indolagus sondaicus), and Afrolagus for the African Savanna Hare (Afrolagus victoriae), the African Sand Hare (Afrolagus aegyptius), the Ethiopian Lowland Hare (Afrolagus fagani), the Ethiopian Highland Hare (Afrolagus starcki), the Abyssinian Hare (Afrolagus habessicanus), the African Bush Hare (Afrolagus capensis), and the Scrub Hare (Afrolagus saxatilis), hares are more correctly thought to constitute the tribe Leporini, with a total of forty-two extant species under nine genera and three subtribes, with each subtribe containing three extant genera, the three subtribes of hares are Leporina (Woolly Hares), Otolagina (Jackrabbits), and Eulagina (Grass Hares), it is known that the woolly hares (subtribe Leporina) are the most basal of the three hare tribes and are constituted by the genera Lepus, Sinolagus, and Poecilolagus, leaving the jackrabbits (subtribe Otolagina) and grass hares (subtribe Eulagina) both as equally more derived in addition to the former containing the genera Otolagus, Macrotolagus, and Ammolagus and the latter containing the genera Eulagus, Indolagus, and Afrolagus.

  • @neerajkakar8104
    @neerajkakar8104 Год назад

    Good video! Hare is seen in wild and rabbits are domestic.

  • @simons4569
    @simons4569 2 года назад

    Bluelight destrict

  • @BrotherIGuess
    @BrotherIGuess 3 года назад

    HARE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @kentran9721
    @kentran9721 3 года назад +1

    From Edmonton Alberta Canada.
    I want to trap these guys so bad.