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Rabbits have overrun a suburban Florida community.

Randy

Aw, awww!
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A community in South Florida has an adorable problem on its hands.

Dozens of domesticated bunnies have overrun parts of Wilton Manors, a suburb of Fort Lauderdale. Two years after a resident let loose lionhead rabbits from their backyard, according to local lore, the number of rabbits now outnumber the 81 homes in the Jenada Isle neighborhood.

The furry invasion has divided the neighborhood's residents. Some have allegedly threatened to shoot the animals or feed them to their snakes. Some want to let the bunnies roam free. Others, concerned about the rabbits' safety, are racing to raise money to save them.


East Coast Rabbit Rescue, a nonprofit organization, is spearheading an effort to rescue and rehome the bunnies. The group managed to rescue 19 rabbits on Friday, three of which are pregnant.

The volunteer-run outfit began rounding up the rabbits after partnering with city police to complete the mission.

The big challenge in trapping the rabbits has been the residents, says ECRR President Monica Mitchell.

"Our hope was to rescue up to 45 — that was our goal yesterday," she said on Saturday. "But, unfortunately, we encountered lots of issues there ... because the residents were so hostile. Some residents didn't want us to take the bunnies."

An officer from the Wilton Manors Police Department was present during the mission to provide protection, but Mitchell is asking the city to do more.

"The city needs to approach the residents in a different way," she said, and "say, hey, you guys need to allow the rescue to come and get the rest of the bunnies. They haven't done that."

The lionhead rabbits, a fluffier species noted for their thick mane (or double mane or full mane) circling the head, aren't built for suburban Florida, Mitchell says.

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The animals, which are prone to heat stroke, she says, have been digging holes in the ground to escape the oppressive heat, to the irritation of some residents. Lacking a proper source of clean water or food, the rabbits have been grazing on lawns that could be treated with toxic pesticides. The rabbits are also at the mercy of the area's predators and cars.


The West Palm Beach-based group says it will need at least $40,000 to be able to capture, neuter and spay, vaccinate and microchip the over 100 rabbits-and-counting. So far, it's raised over half of that goal. The WMPD has not yet committed funds toward the effort, a spokesperson told NPR.

The costs are quickly adding up, Mitchell says.

Care for each rabbit costs between $200 to $300, she says, not including any extra medical attention she says several bunnies need.

The rabbits require care from exotic veterinarians, which are rarer and costlier than vets who treat the common pet. Rabbit Rescue is preparing for high vet bills, which in some cases will include surgery to treat the animals, the group's president said.

"Sometimes the vet that is willing to or capable to do the surgery is like 3 to 4 hours away from us," she added.

During an April 25 city council meeting, Wilton Manors councilmembers were concerned that drafting policies to solve the problem would set a precedent for the need to curb other invasive animals, including iguanas and ducks.

Mitchell says that according to neighbors she's spoken to, the rabbits descend from pets kept by a former resident who illegally let them loose when she moved out of state two years ago.

Naturally, they've since reproduced, multiplying like rabbits.

Mitchell's rescue group is calling on the community to help with donations, supplies and fosters to care for the captured rabbits.

"Please contact us if you can foster some bunnies and live in West Palm Beach area," ECRR wrote in a post on its Facebook page. "We will provide everything, you just need to love them."

Thoughts?
 
Aww, they are so cute! That is an adorable invasion.. and I hope no one has a garden in that neighborhood.

My neighborhood has a shit ton of both foxes and rabbits, and the previous owner of our house actually had a garden..

But yeah I hope they succeed in their plan because rabbits have the half the gestation period of cats, which (for cats) is about 2 months, so that means every pregnancy is about 30 days and once they are done, they are ready to go again..

They are much smaller and varied in color than ones in my neighborhood are.. mine are all brown but they are big.. and you see them in the early morning for the most part..
 
Bye-bye bunnies
Jan 6, 2005

-- Citing animal safety and human health and liability issues, the Wenatchee Valley Humane Society and Chelan County PUD have finally decided to do something about those dam rabbits.

Relocation of several hundred rabbits from the Rocky Reach Dam grounds to a warmer, safer animal sanctuary near Redmond is not expected to be a popular move, but it is a necessary one, said Steve Lachowicz, PUD spokesman.

"We recognize that there are a lot of tender feelings associated with the rabbits," Lachowicz said Wednesday. "This is really what's best for the rabbits."

Gone will be those keepsake Easter photo-ops of kids feeding and chasing rabbits over the grassy knolls above the dam. Gone too, say proponents of the roundup, will be the threat of contagious disease, domestic animals targeted by predators and subject to freezing temperatures, and the potential for vehicle accidents caused by rabbits running across Highway 97A.

The PUD plans to capture the 300 to 400 rabbits estimated to be occupying the shrubbed, grassy entrance to the Rocky Reach grounds, where the domestic bunnies have lived and bred for more than 20 years. The rabbit population was started by people dropping off their Easter pets, said Lachowicz. State law prohibits abandoning domestic animals and signs are posted in the area, he said, but people do it anyway.

The PUD is concerned that it and its customer-owners could be sued if a person were infected by a disease-carrying rabbit or if motorists were injured.

"The last thing we need is a car on the highway swerving to avoid a rabbit and someone getting hurt," he said.

About 40 rabbits have been collected for an assessment of the rabbit population's general health, said Randy Hein, one of two local veterinarians who support the relocation because of the bunnies' potential health threat to humans. Hein said people who handle feral rabbits are susceptible to scratches or bites that could transmit several serious diseases, including rabies, ringworm and tularemia. Hein said handling the rabbits can also bring problems with skin mites, rashes and allergies.

The rest of the rabbits will be captured starting next week after volunteers and additional veterinarians can be found to collect, examine and transport the animals, said Scott Wallace, Humane Society operations director. Each of the rabbits must be examined and spayed or neutered before it will be accepted at the nonprofit 4.5-acre Rabbit Meadow rabbit sanctuary, operated by Sandi Ackerman of Redmond. The $50 to $100 per animal veterinary costs -- a total of $17,500 to $35,000 if 350 rabbits are moved -- will be paid by the PUD.

Ackerman, president of the Seattle House Rabbit Society, offers a predator-free environment for the rabbits and puts them up for adoption through her Lake City business, Best Little Rabbit, Rodent and Ferret Home, said Wallace.

"The rabbits may be cute, but it's not doing them any good to be out there," Wallace said. Population has grown to an all-time high, he said, causing the rabbits to expand their territory into the PUD's woodpiles and equipment yards. Wallace said the population can double or triple every few years in spite of the animals' being subject to predation and road kill. The population also encourages people to abandon their pets there -- not only rabbits, but guinea pigs and other animals. Those also will be taken to the shelter.

"That's one of the main things we want to prevent," he said. He said the sanctuary will be a much safer, kinder environment for the animals. "This is something we've wanted to see happen for quite awhile."
 

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