January's record-breaking rainstorms left endangered riparian brush rabbits in a lurch when water poured over levees on the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s San Joaquin River National Wildlife Refuge. Knowing the rabbits would be getting corralled into small islands of high ground by the floodwaters, Refuge staff jumped into action.
“Our biologists at the Refuge Complex quickly began trapping and rescuing riparian brush rabbits,” said Fumika Takahashi, wildlife biologist at the San Luis National Wildlife Refuge Complex, which includes the San Joaquin River National Wildlife Refuge. "We had to be very careful about preventing the spread of rabbit hemorrhagic disease, which is highly contagious to rabbits."
Rabbit hemorrhagic disease was detected on San Joaquin River National Wildlife Refuge in 2022 after two years of vaccination efforts by Refuge staff and partners in the riparian brush rabbit working group. Vaccinating the rabbits is one of the most important actions the Service and its partners can take to support the rabbit’s recovery.
For January's flood rescues, administering the life-saving vaccination immediately became a part of the plan.
“Our crew of biologists, along with the refuge manager and other staff, worked long and challenging hours,” said Takahashi. “We successfully rescued, vaccinated and tagged 103 rabbits and moved them to higher ground on the refuge.”
Preparing for Future Floods
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