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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Release may help rabbits bounce back


 A juvenile Columbia Basin pygmy rabbit, born in captivity, is shown at Washington State University  in this undated photo. About 23 of the endangered rabbits will be reintroduced to their natural habitat Tuesday in Douglas County. 
 (File Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Nicholas K. Geranios Associated Press

An emergency effort to save endangered Columbia Basin pygmy rabbits will get its first test next week when state and federal scientists release nearly two dozen of the animals back into their native habitat in north-central Washington.

The rabbits that will be released Tuesday are the product of an emergency roundup six years ago of the remaining pygmy rabbits in the region, which were put into a captive-breeding program in a last-ditch effort to increase their numbers.

“This is the first reintroduction, so it’s a learning process,” said Tom Buckley of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in Spokane.

About 23 pygmy rabbits will be released on a state wildlife area in Douglas County. The rabbits will be placed in artificial burrows for cover until they dig their own burrows, and will wear tiny radio transmitters around their necks to allow biologists to monitor their movements.

More than 70 pygmy rabbits will remain in the captive breeding program to provide animals for future releases. The program has placed breeding rabbits at the Oregon Zoo, Northwest Trek near Tacoma and at Washington State University.

The Columbia Basin pygmy rabbit is the country’s smallest native rabbit, according to a press release from the state and federal agencies. It was listed as a state endangered species in 1993.

By 2001, there were fewer than 40 pygmy rabbits left in the Sagebrush Flat area of Douglas County. In 2003, the Columbia Basin population was federally listed as an endangered species.

Biologists for the state captured 16 of the remaining Columbia Basin rabbits in 2001 and 2002. Captive breeding started in 2002.

Efforts to breed rabbits solely from Columbia Basin stock were unsuccessful. Biologists believe the rabbits’ decline in population may be due in part to genetic inbreeding that occurred as numbers dwindled in the wild.

In 2003, Washington pygmy rabbits were crossbred with Idaho pygmy rabbits.

The rabbits being released have approximately 75 percent Columbia Basin ancestry, Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife biologist Dave Hays said.