Recovery: Second Chance for Yankee Cottontails

After decades of being ignored, the little-known New England cottontail has a hopeful future.

Stunned but delighted is how Dr. Robert McDowell, Director of Wildlife at the University of Connecticut, sounded when I arrived at his office to learn about New England cottontail rabbits.

Finally someone other than himself was interested in these vanishing natives. We pored over skulls and skins and vainly patrolled early successional woods for live specimens. McDowell seethed about the mindset of state fish and game bureaucrats: we can’t waste time on a few native rabbits when we have so many look-a-like non-natives and when license buyers want more pheasants, ducks and deer.

The year was 1983.

The non-natives, called “eastern cottontails,” are a genetic mishmash of species and subspecies plucked from Minnesota, West Virginia, Kansas, Missouri, Texas, Arizona and New Mexico. From the late 1800s to the early 1970s fish and game agencies in the Northeast permitted, encouraged and initiated stocking of these aliens. The result is a tough, adaptable mongrel imbued with hybrid vigor that outcompetes the fragile, specialized native.

In the field even biologists can’t tell an eastern cottontail from a New Englander, but under the skin they’re very different beasts, apparently incapable of hybridization. Easterns can make a living most anywhere, including the young forests on which New England cottontails depend and which, because of fire suppression and beaver-dam control, we’re running out of.

Thanks largely to people like McDowell and Dr. John Litvaitis, a wildlife professor at the University of New Hampshire, there has been a sea change in attitudes. Major funds started pouring in for habitat work when the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation and the Wildlife Management Institute (WMI) got interested in New England cottontails. Now New York and every New England state (save Vermont where the species has been extirpated) is represented on a New England Cottontail Technical Committee. A state, federal and private partnership called the New England Cottontail Initiative is undertaking young-forest restoration rangewide. And rabbits are being raised for release at the Roger Williams Park Zoo in Rhode Island, the Queens Zoo in New York, and Great Bay National Wildlife Refuge in New Hampshire.

New England Cottontail release. Photo © Paul Fusco, CT DEEP

On December 14, 2016 America’s newest national wildlife refuge — the Great Thicket, taking in parts of all six New England cottontail states, was jump-started by a gift from The Nature Conservancy of its 144-acre Nellie Hill Preserve in Dover Plains, New York. In addition to native cottontails the refuge will provide habitat for dozens of other depressed young-forest-dependent species.

The New England cottontail had been a candidate for Endangered Species Act protection, but on September 11, 2015 the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service determined that listing was not warranted because of all the recovery work.

I wish McDowell could have been with me and my wife Donna on May 17, 2017 when Wayne Woodard, director of The Nature Conservancy’s 1,900-acre Sunny Valley Preserve in Bridgewater, Connecticut, showed us the kind of work the partnership is doing.

Serenaded by bobolinks, yellow warblers, common yellowthroats, American redstarts and red-winged blackbirds, Woodard, Donna and I hiked along meadows managed for grassland birds. In the distance unfurling leaves of mature hardwoods glowed chartreuse in full afternoon sun. Much of this forest, the bane of New England cottontails, is scheduled for clearcutting, but first the understory of invasive barberry needs to be removed. A year earlier a contractor had herbicided a 25-acre plot on the uphill (east) side of a stonewall because barberry seeds mostly by gravity. The contrast with the grossly infested west side was striking. “We had a 95-percent kill rate,” said Woodard. “We’ll go back and treat what’s left, then next winter we’ll do a clearcut.” Barberry on the west side of the stonewall is scheduled for herbiciding, too.

Much of the public reviles herbicides. But Woodard has done extensive outreach, so opposition is less intense here than at other sites. “By July first we’ll have cleared invasives from 70 acres,” he said. “We couldn’t possibly have done that without herbicides. It would have been like putting out a forest fire with a bucket brigade.”

Wayne Woodard by a Multiflora rose. Photo © Donna Williams

Multiflora rose is one invasive that Woodard has to leave until native shrubs get established. “Rabbits love it,” he said. “That’s what’s kept this abandoned farmland from reverting to forest.”

Deer densities in this part of the East are among the highest in the nation. Deer are spreading invasives, eating natives that provide thicket habitat for New England cottontails and eliminating ground-and shrub-nesting birds. So ten years ago the Conservancy opened the preserve to controlled deer hunting.

“With clearcuts,” explained Woodard, “we’re trying to replicate natural disasters like fires and hurricanes.” In another section of the preserve he showed us a recent clearcut that was strewn with tops and slash to serve as temporary rabbit cover and protection from deer browsing until native vegetation fills in. In nature the word “ugly” has no meaning.

Helping the Conservancy and other partners with habitat work has been Lisa Wahle, a WMI contract biologist working with the Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection.

“Our biggest issue is people not wanting to cut trees,” she told me. “They’ve heard lots of drum beating about forest fragmentation from clearcuts; but we’re not doing clearcuts like on the West Coast. We started out asking for 25 acres, and quickly backed off that. The minimum patch that NRCS will pay for is six acres. But even six acres is a lot to ask for people who aren’t used to seeing clearcuts. Depending where they’re sited, there may be some initial fragmentation and perhaps cowbirds.”

But these cuts grow back lush and fast, and then they’re just roaring with shrubland species. Interior forest species use them too — it’s where the food is, she continues. “People I’d expect to be more tuned in to the value of occasional patches of young forest are still opposed. In northwest Connecticut there’s even a push for ‘forever wild’ status, which basically puts an easement on your property so you can’t manage it for anything — ever!”

New England cottontail habitat work at Avalonia Land Cosnervancy in Connecticut. Photo courtesy of Suzanne Paton, USFWS

But, like Woodard, Wahle and her colleagues are big on outreach. And, along with frustrations, she cites major successes with land trusts, sportsmen’s clubs and private landowners.

David Gumbart, who directs land management for The Nature Conservancy in Connecticut, reports that New England cottontails have recently been documented on the Conservancy’s Lord Cove Preserve in Lyme. “Wherever we have them we invest in management,” he says.

Captive breeding has progressed to the point that New England cottontails are now being conditioned to the wild before release. When Donna and I inspected the rabbits being raised at the Roger Williams Park Zoo by conservation director Lou Perrotti we began to see a few of the subtle markings that distinguish them from the aliens. They were a bit darker and smaller. Ears were trimmed with fine, black fur and they lacked the white forehead spots common on easterns.

New England cottontail bred at the Roger Williams Park Zoo in Rhode Island. Photo © Lou Perrotti

These and other of the zoo’s rabbits have been released on Patience Island in Narragansett Bay. So robust is the population there that animals are being live trapped and sent to the new outdoor breeding facility at Great Bay National Wildlife Refuge in New Hampshire and released in Rhode Island’s Great Swamp Wildlife Management Area.

Rabbits bred at the zoo have also been released at the Bellamy River Wildlife Management Area, biggest habitat restoration site in New Hampshire. When I caught up with manager Jim Oehler he and 87 volunteers had just planted 10,500 native shrubs. And he’s been clearcutting. Eventually 200 acres, nearly half the property, will be converted to young forest.

One thing New England cottontails have going for them is that the public considers them “cute,” an advantage many vanishing species — timber rattlesnakes, for example — lack. In addition to New England cottontails Lou Perrotti has been raising timber rattlers, more endangered in New England than any other species. This was part of a project by the Massachusetts Division of Fisheries and Wildlife to prevent extirpation by establishing a colony on an uninhabited island in the middle of the state’s sprawling Quabbin Reservoir.  No one gets bitten by these shy, reclusive snakes; they’re no more dangerous to humans than rabbits, and the island is off limits to the public. But last April, after years of patient education by the Division, snake haters shouted down the project.

For the most part, the American public has yet to grasp what McDowell and Litvaitis understood from the start and what fish and game bureaucrats have learned since 1983 — that imperiled species need to be saved not because they are “cute,” not because they are “beautiful,” not because they are useful, not because they are anything. Only because they are.

Amanda Cheeseman and a colleague process an eastern cottontail. Researchers trap cottontails to gather information and then safely release the rabbits. Photo courtesy of Amanda Cheeseman on New England Cottontail / Flickr

Published on - Updated on

Join the Discussion

Join the Discussion

Please note that all comments are moderated and may take some time to appear.

41 comments

  1. Allyson Cheynes says:

    Lisa Wahle and CT DEEP and TNC are no friends of the forest, insisting that forests that reach 75 years are a threat to nature. They are destroying forests to support a creature that was restricted to a few coastal and floodplain habitats before the vast deforestation that followed European settlement. And her comment about small clearcuts is just another lie – go look at the 100-acre cuts that she’s perpetrated all over our landscape. The basis for their work is not supported in the peer-reviewed science but is linked to the DEEP’s desperation over declining hunting revenues and a declining deer population unsuited for maturing wildlands. They are lining up to kill black bears and bobcats … they are laying the foundation for this killing right now. Terrible and terrifying, they are the latest threat to wild native systems. Don’t believe the lies. Do your own research. They are all about killing trees, deer, bobcats, beavers, mink, otter, bobcat, and bears. Once they get enough rabbits, they’ll be killing them, too.

  2. Sarah Carey says:

    I have a little eastern cottontail in my yard/woods….his mother died a few weeks ago…he’s about 2-3 months old….he/she’s enjoying life – but I was wondering – is it possible for me to aquire a couple more so this little fellow could have company? I own 2 acres which abuts local conservation land. I have a barn which a lot of animals seem to love living underneath (the barn is lifted about 4 feet from the ground, so they all go underneath it). ..but again, wanted to get this little bunny some company. Any advice you’re able to give is most appreciate. Thank you,
    Sarah Carey, Shelton, CT

    1. Lisa Feldkamp says:

      Hi Sarah, Thank you for the work you are doing to protect New England cottontails on your land! I recommend contacting someone with this New England Cottontail project: https://newenglandcottontail.org/content/people-contact I believe they do reintroductions on private land – let them know that you are interested.

  3. Stephen Bodio says:

    God piece, Ted! Have you read the one on Red Crossbills in High Country News?

  4. Debra Pinkham-Salt says:

    We enjoyed a large Family of cottontails for 3 Summers.After the hard Winter of 2015 they must have perished in the cold as they lived underground under our deck.Efforts to leave hay and treats they enjoyed went uneaten.I still have yet to see another cottontail and I’m in a very wooded,deer laden area away from the city.I was wondering if there has been a decline in observation in their numbers since that Winter.
    Sincerely,
    Debra Pinkham-Salt

  5. Ted Williams says:

    Hi Paul Rickey:
    Thanks much for your generous offer. For this column, however, we use just photos. Have you considered self-publishing your poems? It’s very hard to get a publisher to bite on poems; and if you get real lucky, they don’t spend money on publicity and then take at least 95 percent of the sales revenue. It costs a bit to self-publish, but then you get all the income. My uncle, Ed French, wrote some terrific poems, but never published one. When he died I took the best 150 and self-published them in the book “Bluets Stay True.” One of his poems was read before the New Hampshire legislature:

    Northern Counties
    by Edward L. French

    The further north you go
    The taller the trees
    The deeper the snow,
    The older the ways
    And sweeter the days.

    Snowshoes hung on the porch
    Along with the laundry line
    Telling secrets of who lives here,
    Their colors preferred and what they wear.

    Always the woodpile,
    Always the axe,
    Always the calloused hands.

    Always the hate of rules and tax,
    Always they fit these stony lands,
    Always stubborn but never late,
    For they were made of the Granite State.

  6. Paul Rickey, Jr. says:

    . I love the work you are doing. I am a disabled navy veteran of the Korean War and an artist and poet. None of my poems ever published. I have sold a few paintings (helps pay for art material). I sure would like to help what you do, but I have very little money. Could my artwork be of any help? I would donate it if you think it could help.

    -Paul Rickey, Jr.