What Do You Feed Wild Rabbits of Conejo Valley

How to Manage Pests

Pests in Gardens and Landscapes

Rabbits

Revised 8/22

In this Guideline:

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Adult black-tailed jackrabbit.

Adult black-tailed jackrabbit.

Desert cottontail rabbit.

Desert cottontail rabbit.

Young brush rabbits.

Young brush rabbits.

Characteristic chewing damage by rabbits.

Characteristic chewing damage by rabbits.

Trunk guards to exclude vertebrate damage to young trees.

Trunk guards to exclude vertebrate damage to young trees.

Rabbits are a type of animal people might enjoy seeing in the wild, but they also are an animal that can be very destructive to gardens and landscaped areas. Seven species of rabbits are found in California and three of these species—the black-tailed hare or jackrabbit, Lepus californicus, the desert cottontail, Sylvilagus audubonii, and the brush rabbit, S. bachmani—are widespread and cause the majority of problems. Because of its greater size and abundance, the jackrabbit is the most destructive.

IDENTIFICATION AND BIOLOGY

The jackrabbit is about as large as a house cat, weighing 3 to 7 pounds with a body length of 17 to 21 inches. It has a grayish-brown body, long black-tipped ears, relatively long front legs, and even longer hind legs. The top of its tail is black.
The desert cottontail rabbit and brush rabbit are distinguished from jackrabbits by their smaller size and shorter ears. The desert cottontail is 12 to 15 inches long, weighs 1 1/2 to 2 3/4 pounds, and has pale gray fur with yellow tints. The brush rabbit is slightly smaller at 11 to 13 inches long; it weighs 1 1/4 to 1 4/5 pounds and has brown fur.

A clear sign that rabbits are present is coarse, circular fecal droppings, or pellets, found scattered over an area. Pellet size varies roughly with the body size of the species. Jackrabbit pellets are up to 1/2 inch in diameter, whereas pellets of the cottontail are closer to 1/4 inch.

Jackrabbits

You'll usually find jackrabbits in open or semi-open areas of California's valleys and foothills but seldom in dense brush or woodlands. Within their preferred habitats, jackrabbits are quite adaptable and inhabit areas around the fringes of urban and suburban developments, green belts, golf courses, parks, airports, and agricultural lands. They make a depression in the soil, called a "form," beneath a bush or other vegetation and use it for hiding and resting during the day. Jackrabbits depend on speed and dodging to elude predators. In California, an average density of about 1.2 jackrabbits per acre is typical, but during periods of high reproduction, this number can increase.

The breeding season for jackrabbits runs from late January through August, although breeding is possible during any month of the year where winters are mild. Litters average between 2 to 4 young, and jackrabbits can have as many as 5 to 6 litters per year. Young jackrabbits are born fully furred and with their eyes open. Within a day they can move about quite rapidly.

The food habits of jackrabbits vary, depending on location and the availability of appropriate plants. Rabbits prefer to eat succulent, green vegetation, with grasses and herbaceous plants making up the bulk of their diet. In some areas rabbits eat the leaves, bark, or seeds of woody shrubs. Feeding usually begins during the evening hours and continues throughout the night into the early morning. Jackrabbits can survive without a supply of drinking water.

If food and other necessary resources are available in one place, jackrabbits exhibit no major daily movements. If food sources and areas for shelter are separated, jackrabbits will move between these areas in the morning and evening. Daily travel of 1 to 2 miles between areas is common. During dry periods, roundtrips of up to 10 miles have been observed. These travels are habitually made on the same trails every day, producing noticeable paths through herbaceous vegetation.

Desert Cottontail and Brush Rabbits

Unlike jackrabbits, desert cottontail and brush rabbits generally inhabit places with dense cover such as brushy areas, wooded areas with some underbrush, or areas with piles of rocks or debris. You also might find them living beneath slightly raised sheds or other buildings where there is an opening at the base. They also will use abandoned structures and sometimes cultivated fields for cover. These rabbits use open areas more at night and dense cover more during the day. The brush rabbit, however, seldom feeds more than a few feet from its cover.

Most cottontails and brush rabbits have a home range of up to 10 to 15 acres. A good habitat, such as a park with a clump of low-growing junipers about 30 feet wide, can harbor 10 to 15 cottontails, but normal density is considerably less—an average of 1 rabbit per acre. In urban areas with few predators the populations will be considerably more. Cottontails and brush rabbits aren't territorial but maintain home ranges that overlap broadly with other individuals of all age and sex classes. Cottontails and brush rabbits don't exhibit the same magnitude of daily travel as seen in jackrabbits, although they do make habitual use of travel lanes within their home range.

The breeding season for both cottontails and brush rabbits begins in December and ends in June. The average litter size is usually 3 to 4 young, and there can be up to 6 litters per year. These rabbits give birth in a shallow depression on the ground. The newborn rabbits, which are nearly furless and have closed eyes, remain in the nest for several weeks.

The food habits of cottontails and brush rabbits vary with the location and time of year. Cottontails feed seasonally on grasses, sedges, herbaceous plants, willows, oaks, blackberries, and wild roses. Brush rabbits prefer clover and also feed on the stems and berries of woody plants such as blackberries.

DAMAGE

Rabbits can be very destructive in gardens and landscaped places. This is particularly true where wild or uncultivated lands border residential zones, parks, greenbelts, or other landscaped places. Open lands such as uncultivated, wild areas provide resting and hiding cover during the day within easy travel distances to prime, irrigated food sources. A partial list of crops and plants that rabbits damage:

  • Vegetables: beans, beet, broccoli, carrot, lettuce, and peas
  • Tree and berry crops: almond, apple, blackberry, cherry, citrus, pistachio, plum, raspberry, and strawberry
  • Herbs: cilantro and parsley
  • Ornamental plants: various flowers, shrubs, trees, and turf

Rabbits also gnaw and cut plastic irrigation lines, especially small diameter tubes. You can protect these by hanging them out of the reach of rabbits or by encasing them in regular 3/4-inch PVC pipe.

Most rabbit damage is close to the ground, except where snow allows rabbits to reach higher portions of plants. Rabbits use their incisors to make a characteristic diagonal, 45° cut when clipping off woody twigs, buds from saplings, or flower heads. At first you might confuse a rabbit's twig clipping with deer browsing. However, you easily can identify deer damage on woody plants if it occurs above a height that rabbits can reach—about 2 feet—and by carefully examining the damaged twigs. Deer have no upper front teeth and must twist and pull when browsing, leaving a ragged break on the branch. Rabbits clip twigs off cleanly, as if with a knife.

Rabbits tend to gnaw the smooth, thin bark from young trees. The rough bark of older trees discourages gnawing, although old damage and gnaw marks often are present on old bark along with fresh patches of gnawing in areas of younger growth. Gnawing can completely girdle or remove a ring of outer and inner bark from, a tree; clipping can remove the terminal shoot and lateral branches from plants. Damage by cottontails and brush rabbits often is concentrated in areas near escape cover. Jackrabbits, however, will feed far into open areas and can eat 1/2 to 1 pound of green vegetation each day.

Rabbits can be carriers of tularemia, or rabbit fever. This disease is relatively rare in humans, but you can contract it by handling an infected rabbit with bare hands or by eating insufficiently cooked rabbit meat.

LEGAL STATUS

The California Fish and Game Code classifies jackrabbits, cottontails, and brush rabbits as game mammals. Under this code, the owner or tenant of a property or an employee working on that person's behalf can control jackrabbits, cottontails, and brush rabbits anytime or in any legal manner if the rabbits are damaging crops, landscaping, ornamental plants, or gardens.

No license is required for the owner or tenant to "take" rabbits causing damage. Take is defined as actions to hunt, pursue, catch, capture, or kill, or attempt to do one of these actions. A trapping license from the California Department of Fish and Wildlife is required when trapping rabbits for hire or profit. When using firearms to take rabbits, nonlead ammunition must be used; check with your local game warden for more information, and always check local ordinances before using firearms (See "Other control measures" below for more about firearms). It is illegal to sell the meat or fur of rabbits taken as pests.

MANAGEMENT

A number of methods are available for reducing rabbit damage, but physical exclusion, trapping, and repellents are better choices for protecting gardens and landscaped areas. In cases where these methods aren't practical, contact your local UC Cooperative Extension office or county agricultural commissioner for more information. There are also professional pest control companies that offer rabbit removal solutions.

Exclusion
Fencing

Probably the most long-term, effective way to protect plantings from rabbit damage is to build a fence. Poultry netting (chicken wire) supported by light stakes will provide adequate control, although the mesh size should be no larger than 1 inch in order to exclude young rabbits. Use 48-inch-tall wire and bury the bottom at least 6 to 10 inches into the ground. Bending a few inches of the fence bottom outwardly will further deter rabbits from digging beneath it.

If you don't bury the bottom of the wire fence, you will need to stake the bottom edge to deter rabbits from passing beneath it. Use tight-fitting gates with sills to keep rabbits from digging below the bottom rails. Keep gates closed as much as possible, because rabbits can be active day or night. Inspect the fence regularly to make sure rabbits or other animals haven't dug beneath it.

You can use reusable fence panels instead of a wire fence. Construct a wood lath or PVC frame 24 to 30 inches high. You can vary the length of the panels to match the size of the garden or area you want to protect. Attach 1-inch mesh wire to the frame, then wire the panels to lightweight, temporary fence posts. The low panels allow easy access for gardening, and you can move them when needed.

Cottontails and brush rabbits won't jump a 2-foot fence. Jackrabbits ordinarily won't jump a 2-foot fence unless a dog chases them, or they become otherwise frightened. Discourage jumping by increasing the above-ground height to 3 feet. In snow areas, a higher fence might be necessary. Remember, once a rabbit gets into the fenced area, it might not be able to get out.

Electric netting, a type of electric fence, also is suitable for rabbit control. It is designed for ease of installation and frequent repositioning. Electric netting is intended for temporary use at any one site, making it ideal for seasonal gardens. Because of the many variables affecting the selection of a power source and operation of an electric fence, it is best to consult a reputable dealer for specific details regarding its use.

Trunk Guards

In some cases, protecting individual plants might be more practical than excluding rabbits from an entire area. Poultry netting with a 1-inch mesh and that is 18 to 24 inches wide is ideal for cutting into strips 18 to 20 inches long and forming into cylinders for placement around the trunks of young trees, shrubs, or vines. Bury the bottom of the cylinders 2 to 3 inches, and brace them away from the trunk, so rabbits can't press against the cylinder and nibble through the mesh. Inspect these barriers regularly, and be sure to keep the area inside the barriers clean of leaves, weeds, and other debris to eliminate feeding sites for small rodents. Commercial tree trunk protectors also are available.

Trapping

Cottontail and brush rabbits are relatively easy to trap; however, jackrabbits are very difficult to capture, because they are reluctant to enter a confining space.

Live trapping of cottontails and brush rabbits creates the dilemma of what to do with the trapped animal. According to California Fish and Game Code, it is illegal to release rabbits and most other wildlife in other areas without a written permit. Therefore, if using live traps, the trapper must be prepared to euthanize the rabbit after capture. This would generally be done using a carbon dioxide euthanasia chamber. Detailed directions for the use of a carbon dioxide euthanasia chamber follow that outlined for ground squirrels: www.groundsquirrelbmp.com/euthanasia.html. Please note that handling a live rabbit creates the possible hazard of disease transmission to the trapper, so caution must be used in such situations.

An alternative to live trapping is the use of kill traps. An example of such a trap that can be used for cottontails and brush rabbits is the Conibear trap (type No. 110), which kills the animal outright. Place the trap inside a covered box constructed from 3/4-inch exterior plywood with a 4-inch-wide entrance. To further reduce hazards to children, pets, and poultry, position the trap back from the entrance. Slots at the back end of the box help in positioning the trap as does the hinged lid. The hole cut in the top of the hinged portion and covered with 1/4-inch mesh hardware cloth serves to check the trap or bait. Other kill-type traps, such as a tunnel trap, also are available.

Place traps near cover where the rabbits feed or rest. For bait, use whatever the rabbits are feeding on, or use carrots, cabbage, fresh green vegetables, or apples. Place the bait at the back of the trap. Placing some just outside the trap is helpful too. Check traps daily to replenish bait or remove the catch.

Repellents

Various chemical repellents can reduce or prevent rabbit damage. They are most useful when you apply them to trees, vines, or ornamentals. These products work by creating an unpleasant odor, taste, or stickiness. Research has shown that fear-inducing repellents that contain dried blood (e.g. Plantskydd) or putrescent whole-egg solids (e.g. Bobbex) can reduce rabbit browsing.

Apply repellents before damage occurs, and reapply them frequently, especially after a rain, heavy dew, or sprinkler irrigation or when new growth occurs. In all cases, follow the label directions for the repellent you are using.

The usefulness of repellents is limited. They work best to protect woody plants during the early years before they bear fruit or during winter. Most, except for some of the taste repellents, can't be used on plants or plant parts that humans eat. Repellents usually fail when you use them in a vegetable garden, an area that contains highly preferred rabbit foods, even if the repellents are registered for use on edible crops.

Habitat Management

To discourage cottontails and brush rabbits, especially in suburban areas where alternate habitats might be limited, remove brambles, piles of brush, stones, or other debris where rabbits can hide. Control vegetation along fence rows, ditch banks, or brushy areas. Keep in mind vegetation management can affect other wildlife such as songbirds. Removing cover probably will have little effect on jackrabbits, because they can use cover that often is great distances from their feeding sites.

If outbuildings such as sheds, trailers, or other storage units are on slightly raised platforms of about 2 to 12 inches, construct a mesh barrier to exclude rabbits from hiding underneath.

Other Control Methods

Shooting with firearms can be an effective means of eliminating small numbers of rabbits in rural locations where it is safe to do so. Be aware that the use of firearms is prohibited in urban and suburban locations. That said, legislative clarification from the California Attorney General (Opinion 06-109, 2007) makes it lawful to kill cottontail rabbits that are harming landscaping, ornamental plants, or gardens.

The Attorney General also clarified that taking could be done by an individual or employee using air powered pellet projectiles (air rifle) within 150 yards of an occupied residence, if the rabbits are materially harming landscaping, ornamental plants, or gardens, given that air rifles are not considered firearms. However, such use must be in conformity with applicable local ordinances, and such ordinances and regulations often change rapidly.

Check both local and game regulations for license requirements and any restrictions on shooting in your area. Where applicable, best results for shooting are achieved in early morning or around dusk when rabbits are more active.

Frightening devices, such as noisemakers and flashing lights, generally aren't effective nor are ultrasonic units, which rely on sound waves to repel rabbits. A pet dog left loose within the area you want to protect can be somewhat effective in keeping rabbits away, but some dogs are better at this than others.

Toxic baits are registered for use in agricultural situations to resolve serious crop damage problems when jackrabbits and cottontails are numerous, but their use by most urban and suburban residents isn't practical given that they are restricted-use products. Their use is also more challenging in non-agricultural situations since there are concerns about nontarget exposure to these toxicants. If used, be aware that label instructions require the applicator to recover all rabbits that die after consuming the bait to remove potential secondary exposure risk for predators or scavengers that might consume the dead or dying rabbits. Because the rabbits are likely to die outside the baited property, carcass recovery is extremely challenging.

Biological control

Rabbits serve as food for several predators, including hawks and coyotes, but in urban and suburban situations, the greatest threat is from cats and dogs. Although relatively vulnerable to predators, rabbits generally maintain their populations in spite of this threat.

FOLLOW-UP

If you have built barriers to exclude rabbits, follow-up consists of regularly inspecting the area to ensure rabbits are not breaching them. Inspect previously undamaged plantings for new damage, as rabbits can switch to new food sources after you have excluded them from an existing feeding site.

If trapping or shooting has reduced the rabbit population to a tolerable level, periodically search the area for signs of an increase in rabbits. Look for droppings, trails, and the characteristic 45° cut on twigs and stems. Rabbits are easy to see, but because they frequently feed when it is dark, you might have to examine the garden at night with a flashlight to see them. Their eyes shine yellow or red in a flashlight beam.

Because few, if any, rabbits are acceptable in a garden or landscaped area, take appropriate action when you first observe signs of them. Rabbits seen nearby will frequently invade a garden when the plantings become desirable to them. Consider exclusion methods such as a fence before damage actually occurs.

WARNING ON THE USE OF PESTICIDES


REFERENCES

Baldwin RA, Meinerz R. 2015. Rabbits – black-tailed jackrabbit, cottontail rabbit, and brush rabbit. Pages 262–269 in Vertebrate Pest Control Handbook, RA Baldwin, editor. Sixth edition. California Department of Food and Agriculture, Sacramento, CA.

Craven SR. 1994. Cottontail rabbits. In Hygnstrom SE, Timm RM, G. E. Larson GE, eds. Prevention and Control of Wildlife Damage, Vol. 2. Lincoln: Univ. Neb. Coop. Ext. pp. D.75–80.

Knight JE. 1994. Jackrabbits and other hares. In Hygnstrom SE, Timm RM, Larson GE, eds. Prevention and Control of Wildlife Damage, Vol. 2. Lincoln: Univ. Neb. Coop. Ext. pp. D.81–86.

Salmon TP, Whisson DA, Marsh RE. 2006. Wildlife Pest Control around Gardens and Homes , 2nd ed. UC ANR Publication 21385. Oakland, CA.

PUBLICATION INFORMATION

[UC Peer Reviewed]

Pest Notes: Rabbits

UC ANR Publication 7447         PDF to Print

AUTHOR: Roger A. Baldwin, Department of Wildlife, Fish, and Conservation Biology, UC Davis.
Revised based on a previous version by Terry P. Salmon, UC Cooperative Extension, San Diego Co. and W. P. Gorenzel, UC Cooperative Extension, San Diego Co.
TECHNICAL EDITOR: K Windbiel-Rojas
ANR A SSOCIATE EDITOR: AM Sutherland
EDITOR: B Messenger-Sikes

Produced by University of California Statewide IPM Program

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Source: http://ipm.ucanr.edu/PMG/PESTNOTES/pn7447.html

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