Abstract
Factors determining the trap-response of the rabbit, investigated in a natural population at Urana, N.S.W., included the age and the sex of the rabbit and the season in which it was trapped. Differences were also observed between rabbits living in two adjacent habitats. Mark-recapture data, derived from 52 trips undertaken over 30 months, did not show a uniform probability of capture within the adult population. Adult rabbits were most trappable when they were not breeding (late summer to midwinter); at this time males and females were equally trappable but individual differences were noted. During the breeding season all adults were difficult to trap, males more so than females. Trappability increased with age in young rabbits and declined at sexual maturity. Trap-response was random with respect to the animal's genotype as determined by four polymorphic enzyme loci. Markrecapture- analysis is unlikely to be an accurate means of estimating the parameters of rabbit populations; full enumeration of the population is necessary.