Go ask Alice
It is another day of wiggling around the merry hamlets of the south. I did promise you rabbit holes and, where we have rabbit holes we need lepridae. There are rabbits and, unlike those in England, they needed no Normans to bring them in and build them rather natty warrens as their little paws couldn’t dig their own. Apparently these chaps probably involved in South-East Iberia in the Middle Pleistocene [between 129,000 to 774,100 years ago - the Middle Pleistocene, not the rabbits.] . Rabbits are important, mostly as prey. Tough but them’s the breaks. Apparently the Iberian lynx and Iberian imperial eagle really like bunnies. They are also dispersers of seed. They are keen on dry pastures, which seem to be a good thing. They seem to range up to 300m from home, giving them a territory of 2.5 hectares. Apparently 12 years is a good innings for the rabbit-kind. A survey of the bunnies was done in 2025, which revealed a drop in numbers by 60...