Virginia et al,
I suspect the answer to your question is complicated and
involves more than one factor. In reading about our two jackrabbit species
in Mammals of Colorado (by Fitzgerald, Meaney, and Armstrong), some of
the more pertinent factors determining their population levels seem to
be:
Populations naturally go thru wide fluctuations
(Black-tailed on about 5-year cycles, White-tailed on about 10).
White-tails are probably the more common species on the
West Slope, but encroachment on their former dominance west of the Divide by
Black-tails has been noted.
White-tails suffer more from loss of native vegetation
than Black-tails.
Juvenile jackrabbit mortality is high during any year
(55-70%). Given their high reproductive capacity (up to 5 broods a year,
with 1.9 to 6.4 young per brood), if you do the math, a slight increase or
decrease in survival could lead to wide population swings.
Both eat a lot of grasses and forbs in the summer, a lot
of shrubs and other woody browse plants in the winter.
Coyotes, foxes, badgers, eagles and humans are the main
predators (between 1893 and 1985, organized hunts in Prowers and Las Animas
Counties reported killing 32,000 rabbits!).
1 Cow equals 74 Black-tailed Jackrabbits in terms of
forage consumption (5.8 to 30 jackrabbits = 1 domestic sheep): both from studies
in Arizona and Utah.
My personal comment would be that I consider any
sighting of a White-tailed Jackrabbit these days, particularly on the eastern
plains, to be noteworthy. Apparently this did not used to be the case, but
with all the modifications of the plains by people (agriculture, housing
developments, oil/gas, etc.), the Black-tailed is predominating. I would
also say that human sprawl seems to favor an increase of free-roaming domestic
and feral dogs, foxes, and coyote, which probably isn't good for
rabbits of any kind.
Dave Leatherman
Fort Collins