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When domesticated rabbits go feral, new morphologies emerge

When domesticated rabbits go feral, new morphologies emerge
When domesticated rabbit breeds return to the wild and feralise, they do not simply revert to their wild form—they experience distinct, novel anatomical changes. Credit: Michael SY Lee.

Originally bred for meat and fur, the European rabbit has become a successful invader worldwide. When domesticated breeds return to the wild and feralize, the rabbits do not simply revert to their wild form—they experience distinct, novel anatomical changes.

Associate Professor Emma Sherratt, from the University of Adelaide's School of Biological Sciences, led a team of international experts to assess the body sizes and skull shapes of 912 wild, and domesticated rabbits to determine how feralization affects the animal.

"Feralization is the process by which become established in an environment without purposeful assistance from humans," says Associate Professor Sherratt, whose study was published in .

"While you might expect that a feral animal would revert to body types seen in , we found that feral rabbits' body-size and skull-shape range is somewhere between wild and domestic rabbits, but also overlaps with them in large parts.

"Because the range is so variable and sometimes like neither wild nor domestic, feralization in rabbits is not morphologically predictable if extrapolated from the wild or the domestic stock."

Associate Professor Sherratt, who performed this study as part of her ARC Future Fellowship, says the greater diversity seen in the skull shape of feral rabbit populations could be related to changes in evolutionary pressures.

"Exposure to different environments and predators in introduced ranges may drive populations to evolve different traits that help them survive in novel environments, as has been shown in other species.

"Alternatively, rabbits may be able to express more trait plasticity in environments with fewer evolutionary pressures.

"In particular, relaxed functional demands in habitats that are free of , such as Australia and New Zealand, might drive body size variation, which we know drives cranial shape variation in introduced rabbits," she says.

Associate Professor Sherratt plans to follow up this research by looking into what drive the observed variation in and skull shape of Australia's feral rabbits.

"We found Australian feral rabbits are quite a lot larger than European rabbits. We intend to find out why," she says.

"And we focus on skull shape because it tells us how animals interact with their environment, from feeding, sensing and even how they move.

"Understanding how animals change when they become feral and invade new habitats helps us to predict what effect other invasive animals will have on our environment, and how we may mitigate their success."

More information: Emma Sherratt et al, From wild to domestic and in between: how domestication and feralization changed the morphology of rabbits, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences (2025).

Journal information: Proceedings of the Royal Society B

Citation: When domesticated rabbits go feral, new morphologies emerge (2025, July 8) retrieved 14 July 2025 from /news/2025-07-domesticated-rabbits-feral-morphologies-emerge.html
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