Lepus timidus Linnaeus, 1758

Robert S. Hoffmann, 1993, Order Lagomorpha, Mammal Species of the World (2 nd Edition), Washington and London: Smithsonian Institution Press, pp. 807-827 : 820-821

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.7353088

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7281172

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C061D547-FFC2-005E-FECA-CF578A75FC7B

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scientific name

Lepus timidus Linnaeus, 1758
status

 

Lepus timidus Linnaeus, 1758 View in CoL . Syst. Nat., 10th ed., 1:57 View Cited Treatment .

TYPE LOCALITY: "in Europa" [Uppsala, Sweden] .

DISTRIBUTION: Palearctic from Scandinavia to E Siberia, except E Chukotsk ( Russia), south to Sakhalin and Sikhote-Alin Mtns ( Russia); Hokkaido ( Japan); Heilungjiang, N Xinjiang ( China); N Mongolia; Altai, N Tien Shan Mtns; N Ukraine, E Poland, and Baltics; isolated populations in the Alps, Scotland, Wales and Ireland. Introduced into England, Faeros and Scottish Isis.

STATUS: Populations fluctuate, but none apparently threatened, except perhaps in Alps ( Flux and Angermann, 1990).

SYNONYMS: abet Kuroda, 1938; ainu Barrett-Hamilton, 1900; albus Leach, 1816; algidus Pallas, 1778; alpinus Erxleben, 1777 ; altaicus Barrett-Hamilton, 1900; begitschevi Koljuschev, 1936; borealis Pallas, 1778; breviauritus Hilzheimer, 1906; canescens Nilsson, 1844; collinus Nilsson, 1831; gichiganus J. Allen, 1903; hibernicus Bell, 1837; kamtschaticus Dybowski, 1922 ; kolymensis Ognev, 1923 ; kozhevnikovi Ognev, 1929; lugubris Kastschenko, 1899; lutescens Barrett-Hamilton, 1900; nwrdeni Goodwin, 1933; orii Kuroda, 1928; rubustus Urita, 1935; saghaliensis Abe, 1931; sclavonius Blyth, 1842; scoticus Hilzheimer, 1906; septentrionalis Link, 1795; sibiricorum Johanssen, 1923; sylvaticus Nilsson, 1831 ; transbaicalicus Ognev, 1929; typicus Barrett-Hamilton, 1900; variabilis Pallas, 1778; varronis Miller, 1901.

COMMENTS: Subgenus Lepus ( Gureev, 1964:180) . Formerly included arcticus and othus ; see Corbet (1978c:73); but also see comments under those species. A. J. Baker et al. (1983) found Scottish and Alpine populations morphologically distinct, as well as geographically isolated, from other populations, and Flux (1983) remarked that L. t. scoticus and L. t. hibernicus (from Scotland and Ireland, respectively), both introduced on the island of Mull ( Hewson, 1991) still do not interbreed after 50 years.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Mammalia

Order

Lagomorpha

Family

Leporidae

Genus

Lepus

Loc

Lepus timidus Linnaeus, 1758

Robert S. Hoffmann 1993
1993
Loc

Lepus timidus

Linnaeus 1758: 57
1758
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