The
Indian hare-Lepus nigricollis (Guvier) (Saslo)
The
Indian hare is an animal of open fields and plains. It prefers
busy tracts alternating with cultivation. It is usually nocturnal
in habit. By day, it lies up in a scooped out hollow or ' form
' made in the patch of grass. In this respect, it differs i from
the true rabbit which lives in a burrow and does not occur in
India. This animal' is a great menace to cultivation. Reduced
by snaring and shooting, I the greatest cause for the decline
in its population has been the destruction j of plant cover, which
is still untouched in the southern fringes of the Banni.