Abstract
The behaviour of S, cuniculi was studied on a natural rabbit population present
on an island in Lake Bathurst, N.S.W.
Four individually marked groups of fleas and an unmarked control group, a
total of 454 in all, were released onto five rabbits trapped at one location. Surveys of
the rabbits and their fleas were carried out during the first, second, eighth, and fourteenth
weeks after the fleas were released. Rabbit breeding before the fourteenth week resulted
in an increase, due to breeding, in the number of unmarked fleas recovered at that time.
During weeks one, two, and eight, 316 rabbits, equivalent to three times the
estimated population size, were examined for fleas, and only 77 were recovered. Of
these, 64 (88 %) were found on rabbits trapped within 25 yd of the point at which they
were released. Nine rabbits resident in this area accounted for 52 of these 64 fleas, and
there were frequent changes in the degree and composition of the infestations of these
rabbits. Two rabbits upon which fleas had been released had lost 94 and 96 % of their
fleas within 10 days.
It is suggested that these results indicate that many fleas were living freely within
the rabbit burrows in the immediate area in which they were released.
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
13 articles.
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