Help     Map Index     Contacts    Download Data

NDIS Home Page Hunting Page Fishing Page Wildlife Species Page Exploring Habitat Page Conservation/Planning Page Navigation Menu

Hunting



Hunting Home
Big Game
Bear
Bighorn (Desert)
Bighorn (Rocky Mtn)
Deer (Mule)
Deer (White-tail)
Elk
Moose
Mountain Goat
Mountain Lion
Pronghorn
Small Game Mammals
Aberts Squirrel
Black-tailed Jackrabbit
Desert Cottontail
Eastern Cottontail
Fox Squirrel
Mountain Cottontail
Pine Squirrel
Snowshoe Hare
White-tailed Jackrabbit
Yellow-bellied Marmot
Small Game Birds
American Crow
Band-tailed Pigeon
Blue Grouse
Blue-winged Teal
Chukar
Cinnamon Teal
Common Snipe
Gambel's Quail
Greater Prairie-chicken
Green-winged Teal
Mourning Dove
Northern Bobwhite
Ring-necked Pheasant
Sage Grouse
Sandhill Crane
Scaled Quail
Sharp-tailed Grouse
Sora
Virginia Rail
White-tailed Ptarmigan
Wild Turkey
Furbearers
American Badger
American Beaver
Bobcat
Common Muskrat
Coyote
Raccoon
Red Fox
Striped Skunk



CDOW Website NDIS Home

Hunting Black-tailed Jackrabbit Page


 Black-tailed Jackrabbit
 Lepus californicus

Habitat: The black-tailed jackrabbit is a common resident of grasslands and semidesert shrublands of the western United States.

Diet: The diet consists of a variety of grasses, sedges, forbs, and shrubs. For example, they eat western wheatgrass, alfalfa, burning-bush (summer-cypress), winter wheat, crested wheatgrass, rabbitbrush, and sedge (Flinders and Hansen 1972).

Description: The black-tailed jackrabbit is medium sized to large with a grayish black dorsum and white venter. A black dorsal stripe extends from the tail onto the rump. The ears are dark on the outer tips. The young have a pronounced white spot on the forehead. Winter pelage is paler than summer pelage but never approaches white. Measurements are: total length 470-630 mm; length of tail 50-112 mm; length of hindfoot 110-145 mm; length of ear 100-130 mm; weight 1.3-3.2 kg.

Range in Colorado: Black-tailed jackrabbits are restricted to areas below 2,150 m (7,000 ft) in Colorado, where they are associated with semidesert shrublands and grasslands. They are often found on the margins of cultivated lands. However, range extensions have occurred in the eastern portion of the state (Flinders and Hansen 1972).


Status: CDOW Small Game Mammal



         Help     Map Index     Contacts     Download Data     Hunting     Fishing     Wildlife     Exploring Habitat     Conservation Planning    









   spacer image
Select a Major Topic










separator bar

Black-tailed Jackrabbit NDIS Maps
  No Black-tailed Jackrabbit maps available!


separator bar

Black-tailed Jackrabbit Specific Hunting Links
  No Black-tailed Jackrabbit links available!


Helpful Hunting Links
  CDOW Big Game
  CDOW Hunting Page
  CDOW Small Game
  USNO Sunrise Sunset