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Desert Cottontail (Audubon's Cottontail)

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The desert cottontail (Audubon's cottontail) is a common rabbit native to the American Southwest, very similar to other cottontails around the world, but adapted to live in arid, desert-like environments. It gets all of its water from the grasses, cacti and other forbs. It is also a very important food source for the many carnivores of the desert including golden and bald eagles, great horned owls, ferruginous hawks, badgers, coyotes, foxes, bobcats and humans. This one was photographed early on a summer evening in the Moab Desert in Eastern Utah.

Copyright
© 2014
Image Size
6000x4000 / 13.5MB
Keywords
America, Animalia, Arches, Arches National Park, Audubon's cottontail, Chordata, Grand County, Lagomorpha, Leporidae, Mammalia, Moab, National Monument, National Park Service, S. audubonii, Spring, Sylvilagus, Sylvilagus audubonii, USA, United States, Utah, animal, beautiful, beauty, beige, bunny, coprophagic, cottontail, desert, desert cottontail, environment, fauna, habitat, hare, inland, lagomorph, mammal, national park, native, natural, nature, rabbit, summer, tan, vertebrate, wild, wilderness, wildlife, zoology
Contained in galleries
Rabbits, Hares and Pikas (Lagomorphs)
The desert cottontail (Audubon's cottontail) is a common rabbit native to the American Southwest, very similar to other cottontails around the world, but adapted to live in arid, desert-like environments. It gets all of its water from the grasses, cacti and other forbs. It is also a very important food source for the many carnivores of the desert including golden and bald eagles, great horned owls, ferruginous hawks, badgers, coyotes, foxes, bobcats and humans. This one was photographed early on a summer evening in the Moab Desert in Eastern Utah.