- Location
- Shropshire
Item on news, large numbers of hares dead in East Anglia. Scientists think myxomatosis has jumped species.
Item on news, large numbers of hares dead in East Anglia. Scientists think myxomatosis has jumped species.
From what I’ve read, it’s nit mixy, but VHD.
Some diseases do regularly jump species such as avian flu going from birds to pigs to man . I very much hope Myxie has not jumped, but not impossible. However i doubt it will be the same intensity in hares due to their solitary lifestyle compared to rabbits.Given they are quite disparate species on the tree of evolution, i wonder if mixy is not even possible?
Hares always struggle in dry years when all the land is cultivated and no wheat emerged they do not do well on osr
Now we notill and grow spring crops with cover they have plenty of feed
One of the success signs for over winter stubble or winter cover is the presence of hares
Hares always struggle in dry years when all the land is cultivated and no wheat emerged they do not do well on osr
Now we notill and grow spring crops with cover they have plenty of feed
One of the success signs for over winter stubble or winter cover is the presence of hares
From what I’ve read, it’s nit mixy, but VHD.
......and lack of coursing