An Arctic Hare Traveled at Least 388 Kilometers in a Record-breaking Journey
upstart writes:
An Arctic hare traveled at least 388 kilometers in a record-breaking journey:
BBYY, as the adult female [hare (Lepus arcticus)] was known, made a wild dash of more than 388 kilometers [~384 miles] in 49 days - the longest distance ever recorded among hares, rabbits or any other relatives - researchers report online December 22 in Ecology.
[...] Arctic hares - which weigh roughly the same as house cats, about four kilograms [~9 pounds] - are desirable prey for foxes and wolves on the tundra. Given the hares' important role in the Arctic food web, mammalian ecologist Dominque Berteaux of the Universite du Quebec a Rimouski wanted to know how the animals move across the arid landscape.
In 2019, Berteaux and colleagues affixed satellite tracking collars on 25 hares captured near the northern tip of Ellesmere Island in Nunavut, Canada. As the hares swiftly hopped away, the researchers had no idea the creatures were beginning a mind-blowing expedition across the tundra, Berteaux says. That's because hares and their relatives, called lagomorphs (SN: 3/8/58), typically spend their lives within a single, familiar territory where food is plentiful and easy to find.
[...] For a hare to endure such a perilous journey, it must balance the need to find food without becoming food, says Dennis Murray, a terrestrial ecologist at Trent University in Peterborough, Canada, who wasn't involved in the work. That makes BBYY's excursion even more impressive, he says.
Journal Reference:
Sandra Lai, Emilie Desjardins, Jacob Caron-Carrier, et al. Unsuspected mobility of Arctic hares revealed by longest journey ever recorded in a lagomorph, Ecology (DOI: 10.1002/ecy.3620)
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