The hispid hare (Caprolagus hispidus), also called the Assam rabbit or bristly rabbit, is an Endangered lagomorph of the tall grasslands of the southern Himalayan foothills. The species was confirmed by camera trap in Royal Manas National Park in 2015, making it one of only two globally Endangered lagomorphs and a flagship for the conservation of southern Bhutan grasslands.
The hispid hare (Caprolagus hispidus), known locally and in older literature as the Assam rabbit or bristly rabbit, is a medium-sized lagomorph of the tall, wet alluvial grasslands of the southern Himalayan foothills. It is one of only two lagomorph species globally listed as Endangered on the IUCN Red List and is a priority conservation target for the grassland biome of southern South Asia.[1]
The species was confirmed in Bhutan by a 2015 camera-trap survey in Royal Manas National Park by researchers from the Department of Forests and Park Services, working across three grassland sites in the southern lowlands of the park. Eleven photographs of hispid hare were captured at a single station between March and May 2015, providing the first verified photographic evidence of the species' continued presence in Bhutan after several decades during which Bhutanese records consisted only of incidental sightings and pellet identifications.[2]
The hispid hare's confirmed Bhutanese range is currently limited to the southern grasslands of Royal Manas National Park, with potential occurrence in Phipsoo Wildlife Sanctuary further west. The species' distribution is closely tied to the persistence of tall riverine grassland, making it a useful indicator of grassland habitat condition.[2][3]
Description
The hispid hare is distinguished from sympatric Indian hare (Lepus nigricollis) by its short ears, dark brown coarse pelage and stocky build. The fur is genuinely bristly — the species' epithet hispidus means "bristly" or "rough" in Latin — and the underparts are paler than in most hares. Body length reaches about 50 cm and weight 1.8 to 2.5 kg. Unlike most hares the species is largely nocturnal and crepuscular, sheltering in burrows or in the bases of grass tussocks during the day.[1][4]
Habitat in Bhutan
Hispid hare records from Bhutan come from tall-grassland tracts along the Manas River and its tributaries within Royal Manas National Park. The species selects grasslands dominated by elephant grass (Saccharum spontaneum) and other tall species reaching 2 to 4 metres in height, often interspersed with patches of shorter grass and scrub. Pellet counts from the 2015 survey concentrated along riverbed margins and the boundaries between tall and short grass, suggesting the species feeds in transitional zones and shelters within taller cover.[2]
Phipsoo Wildlife Sanctuary, a 269 km² protected area on the Sarpang–Dagana border, contains comparable grassland habitat and has been identified as the second most likely Bhutanese stronghold for the species, although confirmed records have not yet been published. The wider hispid hare range in South Asia is limited to a string of tall-grassland sites including Bardia, Chitwan and Shuklaphanta in Nepal, parts of Manas in Assam, and Dudhwa in Uttar Pradesh.[3][4]
Threats
The dominant threat to hispid hare across its range is the loss and degradation of tall grassland through dry-season burning, conversion to agriculture, overgrazing by livestock, weed invasion and harvesting of grass for fodder and thatch. Within Royal Manas National Park, the 2015 survey identified uncontrolled burning, livestock grazing and grass collection for elephant fodder as the principal pressures on the hare's habitat. Predation by free-ranging dogs and the loss of cover during the dry season are believed to drive seasonal mortality.[2][5]
The species is sometimes incidentally trapped or hunted by local communities, although it is not a primary target of subsistence hunting in Bhutan. The greater concern is habitat-mediated decline through changes in grassland structure rather than direct offtake.
Conservation
The hispid hare is listed in Schedule I of the Forest and Nature Conservation Act of Bhutan, giving it the highest level of legal protection. Its conservation in Bhutan is largely incidental to the wider grassland and tiger conservation programme in Royal Manas National Park, which forms part of the transboundary Manas Tiger Conservation Landscape jointly managed with Manas National Park in Assam. International support has come from the IUCN Lagomorph Specialist Group, the Critical Ecosystem Partnership Fund, and the Wildlife Conservation Network.[1][2]
The species' role as a flagship for the southern grasslands biome — alongside the Bengal florican, hog deer and the now-likely-extirpated pygmy hog — is increasingly recognised in Bhutanese conservation planning, where high-altitude flagships such as the snow leopard and tiger have historically attracted more attention than lowland grassland species.
References
- Caprolagus hispidus — IUCN Red List of Threatened Species
- Endangered Hispid Hare in the Royal Manas National Park, Bhutan — Nidup et al.
- Biodiversity Baseline Assessment of Phipsoo Wildlife Sanctuary — Asian Development Bank / DoFPS
- Hispid Hare case study — Global Wildlife Conservation
- Distribution Model Reveals Rapid Decline in Habitat Extent for Endangered Hispid Hare — Khanal et al.
See also
Dagana Dzong
Dagana Dzong (Dzongkha: དར་དཀར་ན་རྫོང) is a fortress-monastery in south-central Bhutan that serves as the administrative and monastic centre of Dagana District. Originally constructed in the 17th century, the dzong has been rebuilt and renovated multiple times and occupies a hilltop overlooking the subtropical Dagana valley, one of Bhutan's most culturally diverse regions.
places·5 min readChangangkha Lhakhang
Changangkha Lhakhang is a twelfth-century Buddhist temple in Thimphu, Bhutan, perched on a ridge above the city. One of the oldest and most beloved temples in the capital, it is the traditional site where Thimphu residents bring newborn children to receive blessings and auspicious names.
places·5 min readGasa District
Gasa District (Dzongkha: མགར་ས་རྫོང་ཁག) is the least populated and most remote district in Bhutan, located in the northwestern highlands along the Tibetan border. Known for its hot springs, the Snowman Trek, and the semi-nomadic Layap people, Gasa encompasses some of the highest and most pristine landscapes in the Himalayas.
places·7 min readTrongsa Dzong
Trongsa Dzong (Dzongkha: ཀྲོང་གསར་རྫོང), officially Chokhor Rabtentse Dzong, is a massive fortress-monastery in central Bhutan that commands the strategic east-west passage through the country. It is the ancestral seat of the Wangchuck dynasty, and by tradition every Bhutanese king must first serve as the Trongsa Penlop (governor) before ascending to the throne.
places·5 min readDaga Trashiyangtse Dzong
Daga Trashiyangtse Dzong is a fortress-monastery and the administrative centre of Trashi Yangtse District in the far northeast of Bhutan. Located near the sacred Chorten Kora stupa, the dzong serves as the seat of district governance and monastic life in one of Bhutan's most culturally distinctive eastern regions.
places·6 min readYellow-throated Marten in Bhutan
The yellow-throated marten (Martes flavigula), the largest member of the marten family, is widely distributed across Bhutan from the foothills to the subalpine zone and is one of the most easily observed forest carnivores in the country. The species is assessed as Least Concern globally, although country-level population data for Bhutan are not separately published.
places·5 min read
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