Saturday, June 4, 2011

Earless Rabbits? Time to Panic?

耳のないウサギは非常に珍しいですか? 違います。世界中からの耳のないウサギの写真集!
I posted yesterday morning about the panic that is growing about an earless rabbit being found near Fukushima. I predicted that it was going to get much worse. I was right. Last night, I even saw an advertisement for a gossip magazine on the subway that talked about the rabbit. (Ha! Blog beats old school mass media - again!)




Well, for your edification, here is a blog post that should blast this nonsense out of the water. It is replete with photos of earless rabbits and links to articles from all over the world since 2003. Earless rabbits are not all that rare of an occurrence! After reading this post and examining the evidence, if you still believe that the earless rabbit born in Japan was definitely born that way due to radiation, then I have a 200 acre, rabbit farm on prime ocean property (with a bridge) to sell you.  




This is another example of mass media sensationalism in an attempt to sell advertising and induce panic. 




I've done more research and found that earless rabbits are much more common than even I thought. In fact, they are not all that rare at all. Here's proof with links and photos mostly from a rabbit breeders association in the UK.




In Nuclear Panic! Earless Rabbit Born Near Fukushima Panic Ensues! I wrote:


The fact is that earless rabbits, while sometimes rare, are actually not all that unknown. Here's an article about an earless rabbit that pulled at the heart-strings of the readers of a a famous UK newspaper. He was introduced in What's Up Doc? Meet Vincent the Rabbit Born Without Ears.




Now, upon further research, I find a breeders association in the UK called Rabbits United with a thread entitled Earless Rabbits.


One breeder asks:


After a debate on another forum,

I thought i would ask the question over here.

Should an earless rabbit (due to overgrooming by the mother when it is a kit) be culled by breeders as " When breeding, you have to cut out the bad ones" ?



Notice that this debate was also going on, amongst breeders I assume, at another forum.




Later on in the very same forum thread. There is this (entry #6):


Meet Rosie a gorgeous little earless tri coloured Dutch whose ears were chewed off at birth. She has been coming here on her holidays now for over 2 years and is gorgeous, she is no different to any other rabbit apart from her ears and this doesn't seem to impede her in any way so my answer is a definite NO. She also came from a rescue(where she was born) and her owner picked her because she was different to all the other buns.


Rosie - UK earless rabbit 2009

The evidence is strong that the baby rabbit is question near Fukushima is earless because of over grooming by its mother. Baby rabbits are born underground where they stay for at least a month. Here is information about the interesting breeding habits and bizarre occurrences of birthing of rabbits:

The popular notion of the rabbit's breeding capacity is not exaggerated, for it is possible for a doe to produce a litter of three to six young every month. However, this rarely happens, as over half of the young conceived die before they are born, and are reabsorbed back into the mother's body. As I said above the average production rate is about 10 live young per year.




The young rabbits are born below ground, deaf, blind and without fur. The doe visits her stop once a day to suckle the young and when she leaves she blocks the entrance to conserve heat and as a safeguard against enemies. Within a month the young are capable of looking after themselves.


This means that we do not know what happened with the baby rabbit in question during that first few weeks or so when that baby rabbit was underground. Also, did you catch that part where it said; over half of the young conceived die before they are born, and are reabsorbed back into the mother's body. Bizarre! We do not know of the early days of this earless rabbit, we only know that when it did appear from the hutch it was earless. 




On the popular Internet photo site flickr, they even have a photo album entitled "Earless rabbit". There are photos of earless rabbits from all over the world there.  


And there's much much more! Here's an actual want ad from the UK Daily Echo newspaper on October 17, 2009 about a person who found, not one, but two earless rabbits and is looking for a home for them:



TWO rabbits are looking for new homes after being found callously dumped at the side of a Hampshire road.
They might not have long ears but they are gorgeous nonetheless.

Holly, a grey-coloured female and Vincent, a white male, were found running loose in a lay-by. Their carrying cage was found nearby with the door open. A third large tan and white lop type managed to escape.
Both of the Himalayan – type rabbits are missing their ears but it is not known whether this is a birth defect or whether someone has cut them off.



Using this information that we know to be facts, it is very hard to believe that the earless rabbit born in Namie near Fukushima was born earless due to its mother eating irradiated grass. In fact, it stretches the imagination to even entertain the thought.


Earless rabbit, Japan, 2011 


One earless rabbit does not make a nuclear crisis.... Though one will do nicely to create a panic!








Keywords:


nuclear fallout, crisis, nuclear meltdown, radiation, earless rabbit,  Namie, nuclear, Fukushima nuclear power plants, nuclear accident, earless rabbit, Fukushima,


2 comments:

  1. Those last two rabbits look like they had their ears cut off :( Note their "nubbins", as someone called them, aren't the same as the rest of the "Earless" rabbits. Poor guys. I doubt that rabbit in Japan is a product of the radiation-note the other rabbits it is surrounded by all have their ears. Though radiation is obviously an important issue for everyone unless several other of these rabbits show up in the same area it is most likely not related to the radiation.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Well, no. Not exactly. In fact, at all. The panic is not necessary. Read and then decide for yourself. Again, a clear head and some calm, balanced, rational inquiry will do.

    ReplyDelete

Comments must be succinct & relevant to the story. Comments are checked frequently and abusive, rude or profane comments will be deleted. I’m just one of many bloggers who answer questions online and sometimes for the press. I usually handle questions about Japan, marketing or the economy, so in those areas I’m more likely to make sense and less likely to say something really stupid. If I post something here that you find helpful or interesting, that’s wonderful. This is my personal blog. If you don't like what you have read here then, just like when you go into a restaurant or bar that allows smoking, if you don't like it, there's something at the front that has hinges on it and it is called a "door."