#leporid_mammal__leporidmammal__leporid  rabbits and hares
  supertype:  #lagomorph__gnawing_mammal__gnawingmammal  relative large gnawing animals; distinguished from rodents by having two pairs of upper incisors specialized for gnawing
  member of:  #family_Leporidae
  subtype:  #rabbit__coney__cony  any of various burrowing animals of the family Leporidae having long ears and short tails; some domesticated and raised for pets or food
     subtype:  #lapin  castrated male rabbit
     subtype:  #bunny_rabbit__bunnyrabbit__bunny  (usually informal) especially a young rabbit
     subtype:  #European_rabbit__Old_World_rabbit__Oryctolagus_cuniculus  common grayish-brown burrowing animal native to S Europe and North Africa but introduced elsewhere; widely domesticated and developed in various colors and for various needs; young born naked and helpless
     subtype:  #wood_rabbit__cottontail__cottontail_rabbit  common small rabbit of North America having grayish or brownish fur and a tail with a white underside; a host for Ixodes pacificus and Ixodes scapularis (Lyme disease ticks)
        subtype:  #eastern_cottontail__easterncottontail__Sylvilagus_floridanus  widely distributed in United States except northwest and far west regions
        subtype:  #swamp_rabbit__swamprabbit__swamp_hare__swamphare__Sylvilagus_aquaticus  of southeastern United States swamps and lowlands
        subtype:  #marsh_hare__marshhare__swamprabbit__sylvilaguspalustri  of marshy coastal areas from North Carolina to Florida
     subtype:  #Belgian_hare__leporide  red breed of domestic rabbits; hybrid between Old World rabbit and hare
     subtype:  #Angora_rabbit__Angora  domestic breed with long white silky hair
  subtype:  #hare  swift timid long-eared mammal larger than a rabbit having a divided upper lip and long hind legs; young born furred and with open eyes
     subtype:  #leveret  a young hare especially one in its first year
     subtype:  #European_hare__Lepus_europaeus  large hare introduced in North America; does not turn white in winter
     subtype:  #jackrabbit  large hare of western North America
        subtype:  #white-tailed_jackrabbit__whitetail_jackrabbit__whitetailjackrabbit__Lepus_townsendi  largest hare of northern plains and western mountains of United States; brownish-gray in summer and pale gray in winter; tail nearly always all white
        subtype:  #blacktail_jackrabbit__blacktailjackrabbit__Lepus_californicus  the common jackrabbit of grasslands and open areas of western United States; has large black-tipped ears and black streak on the tail
     subtype:  #polar_hare__polarhare__Arctic_hare__Lepus_arcticus  large hare of Arctic America almost completely white in winter
     subtype:  #snowshoe_hare__snowshoe_rabbit__varying_hare__varyinghare__Lepus_americanus  large large-footed North American hare; white in winter

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