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       E. Raymond Hall

      A Synopsis of the North American Lagomorpha

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066174385

       Order LAGOMORPHA—Hares, Rabbits and Pikas

       Family Ochotonidae —Pikas

       Family Leporidae —Rabbits and Hares

       LITERATURE CITED

       Table of Contents

      Families and genera revised by Lyon, Smithsonian Miscl. Coll., 45:321–447, June 15, 1904. For taxonomic status of group see Gidley, Science, n. s., 36:285–286, August 30, 1912.

      The order Lagomorpha is old in the geological sense; fossilized bones and teeth of both pikas and rabbits are known from deposits of Oligocene age and even at that early time the structural features distinguishing these animals from other orders were well developed.

      A noteworthy character of the order is the presence of four upper incisor teeth (instead of only two as in the Rodentia); also, the fibula is ankylosed to the tibia and articulates with the calcaneum. Each of the first upper incisors has a longitudinal groove on its anterior face.

      All lagomorphs are herbivorous. They eat principally leaves and non-woody stems although the bark of sprouts and bushes is taken as second choice by rabbits and hares.

      The number of molts in a year, depending on the kind of lagomorph, varies in adults from one (according to Nelson, 1909:31) in the cottontails (genus Sylvilagus) to as many as three (according to Lyman, 1943, and Severaid, 1945) in the varying hare (Lepus americanus). Difficulties that I have experienced in attempting to account for the variations in color and wear of the pelage of the pika, Ochotona princeps, on the basis of two molts per year, make me wonder if it, too, has three molts. Lepus townsendii certainly has at least two molts per year.

      Key to Families and Genera of Lagomorpha

       1. Hind legs scarcely larger than forelegs; hind foot less than 40; nasals widest anteriorly; no supraorbital process on frontal; five cheek teeth on each side above

       Family Ochotonidae, Genus Ochotona, p. 125

       1´. Hind legs notably larger than forelegs; hind foot more than 40; nasals widest posteriorly; supraorbital process on frontal; six cheek teeth on each side above

       Family Leporidae, p. 134

       2. Interparietal fused with parietals (see fig. 49); hind foot usually more than 105

       Genus Lepus, p. 170

       2´. Interparietal not fused with parietals (see fig. 10); hind foot usually less than 105

       Genera Romerolagus and Sylvilagus, pp. 137, 138

       Table of Contents

      Certain characters in which this family differs from the Leporidae (hares and rabbits) are: hind legs scarcely longer than forelegs; ears short, approximately as wide as high; no postorbital process on frontal; rostrum slender; nasals widest anteriorly; maxilla not conspicuously fenestrated; jugal long and projecting far posteriorly to zygomatic arm of squamosal; no pubic symphysis; one less cheek-tooth above, the dental formula being i. 2/1, c. 0/0, p. 3/2, m. ⅔; second upper maxillary tooth unlike third in form; last lower molar simple (not double) or absent (in the extinct genus Oreolagus); cutting edge of first upper incisor V-shaped; mental foramen situated under last lower molar.

      Genus Ochotona Link—Pikas

      Revised by A. H. Howell, N. Amer. Fauna, 47:1–57, August 21, 1924.

      1795. Ochotona Link, Beyträge zur Naturgesch, I (pt. 2):74. Type, Lepus ogotona Pallas.

      Subgenus PIKA Lacépède

      1799. Pika Lacépède, Tableau des Divisions &c., Mamm., p. 9. Type, Lepus alpinus Pallas.

      1904. Pika, Lyon, Smiths. Misc. Coll., 45:438, June 15.

      Characters.—Skull flattened; interorbital region wide; maxillary orifice roundly triangular; palatal foramina separate from anterior palatine foramina.

      All of the living members of the family Ochotonidae belong to this genus. American pikas all belong to the subgenus Pika, which occurs also in Eurasia.

      The distribution is boreal and the animals live in talus. This broken rock at the foot of a cliff provides interstices in which the animals live and store grass and herbs. These plant

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