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Hare

Jackrabbit

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By Clarissa Dickson Wright and Johnny Scott

Published 2004

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Hunting hares, Comte Gaston Phebus de Foys, Livre de la Chasse (begun 1387), Bibliotheque Nationale, Paris, France, courtesy of Bridgeman Art Library

North America has three principal hare species—the black and white jackrabbit, and the snowshoe hare. These have a variety of almost indistinguishable relations, like the tundra or arctic hares of the remote, far northwestern coastal regions, and the antelope hare of the Sonoran and Chihuahan deserts. There are also a number of European brown hares in northeastern US, southern Ontario, around the Great Lakes, and south of the Canadian Shield.

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