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Control of field rodents in California (1949) (20692121555)
 

 

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Description
English:

Title: Control of field rodents in California
Identifier: controloffieldro139stor (find matches)
Year: 1949 (1940s)
Authors: Storer, Tracy I. (Tracy Irwin), 1889-1973
Subjects: Rodents; Mammals; Rodents
Publisher: Berkeley, Calif. : College of Agriculture, University of California
Contributing Library: University of California, Davis Libraries
Digitizing Sponsor: University of California, Davis Libraries

View Book Page: Book Viewer
About This Book: Catalog Entry
View All Images: All Images From Book
Click here to view book online to see this illustration in context in a browseable online version of this book.

Text Appearing Before Image:
crop damage may be severe. Overgrazed lands tend to have larger jack rabbit pop- ulations than areas on which the grass cover is higher. SNOWSHOE RABBITS In the higher parts of the Sierra Ne- vada and in the northeastern plateau re- gion of California, there are two kinds of rabbits adapted to living on or in the snow during the winter months: the large white-tailed jack rabbit or Sierra hare (Lepus townsendi sierrae) and the smaller snowshoe rabbit (L. washing- tonii) ; both are hares. These, like the black-tailed jack rabbits, are surface dwellers. Their feet being densely covered with long fur, they can travel readily on snow. The tail of the snow-inhabiting rabbits is always white, and the animals themselves are white in winter. These ani- mals live where there is little intensive agriculture; they occasionally nibble the twigs and bark of apple trees during the winter months, and the snowshoe rabbit damages young forest trees.
Text Appearing After Image:
Fig. 24. Common California rabbits. Left, black-tailed jack rabbit that lives in open country; head-and-body, 18 to 20 inches, ears about 6 inches long. Center, cottontail, common in stream- side thickets and pastures; length about 13 inches, ears 3 inches long. Right, brush rabbit, found close to bushes and chaparral in the foothills; length about 11 inches, ears 2% inches long. 45

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Volume 1949
Flickr tags
  • bookid:controloffieldro139stor
  • bookyear:1949
  • bookdecade:1940
  • bookcentury:1900
  • bookauthor:Storer_Tracy_I_Tracy_Irwin_1889_1973
  • booksubject:Rodents
  • booksubject:Mammals
  • bookpublisher:Berkeley_Calif_College_of_Agriculture_University_of_California
  • bookcontributor:University_of_California_Davis_Libraries
  • booksponsor:University_of_California_Davis_Libraries
  • bookleafnumber:45
  • bookcollection:californiaagriculturalexperimentstationpublications
  • bookcollection:ucdavis
  • bookcollection:americana
  • BHL Collection
Flickr posted date


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Photo's description:
Title: Control of field rodents in California Identifier: controloffieldro139stor (find matches) Year: 1949 (1940s) Authors: Storer, Tracy I. (Tracy Irwin), 1889-1973 Subjects: Rodents; Mammals; Rodents Publisher: Berkeley, Calif. : College of Agriculture, University of California Contributing Library: University of California, Davis Libraries Digitizing Sponsor: University of California, Davis Libraries View Book Page: Book Viewer About This Book: Catalog Entry View All Images: All Images From Book Click here to view book online to see this illustration in context in a browseable online version of this book. Text Appearing Before Image: crop damage may be severe. Overgrazed lands tend to have larger jack rabbit pop- ulations than areas on which the grass cover is higher. SNOWSHOE RABBITS In the higher parts of the Sierra Ne- vada and in the northeastern plateau re- gion of California, there are two kinds of rabbits adapted to living on or in the snow during the winter months: the large white-tailed jack rabbit or Sierra hare (Lepus townsendi sierrae) and the smaller snowshoe rabbit (L. washing- tonii) ; both are hares. These, like the black-tailed jack rabbits, are surface dwellers. Their feet being densely covered with long fur, they can travel readily on snow. The tail of the snow-inhabiting rabbits is always white, and the animals themselves are white in winter. These ani- mals live where there is little intensive agriculture; they occasionally nibble the twigs and bark of apple trees during the winter months, and the snowshoe rabbit damages young forest trees. Text Appearing After Image: Fig. 24. Common California rabbits. Left, black-tailed jack rabbit that lives in open country; head-and-body, 18 to 20 inches, ears about 6 inches long. Center, cottontail, common in stream- side thickets and pastures; length about 13 inches, ears 3 inches long. Right, brush rabbit, found close to bushes and chaparral in the foothills; length about 11 inches, ears
Licensing:
Public Domain


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