Issue 52 | May 2009

Rabbits on the back foot - but naturally they're fighting back

A herd of rabbits in a field

Dr Tanja Strive has found that some rabbits
in cool, high rainfall areas carry a benign virus that
gives them immunity to calicivirus

Australian rabbits have had everything but the kitchen sink thrown at them over the years. Myxomatosis knocked them about, but they bounced back. The same with rabbit haemorrhagic disease (RHD) or the calicivirus.

Now, Tanja Strive from Entomology and the Invasive Animals Cooperative Research Centre has found that some rabbits in cool, high rainfall areas carry a benign virus that gives them immunity to RHD.

'We knew that RHD was not as effective in these areas and we suspected from anti-body responses that there was a non-lethal calicivirus out there. Now we have found it', she said.

'This new virus does not cause disease in rabbits and we fear that it functions as a natural vaccine, protecting rabbits from the lethal calicivirus.'

Tanja said it was a 'needle-in-the-haystack' search as they had to find out:

'We discovered a new, endemic virus that we have called Rabbit Calicivirus Australia1', she said.

'Its ancestors probably came to Australia with the first rabbits 150 years ago. We found it in the intestinal tissues and we believe it has a faecal-oral mode of transmission.'

The CEO of the Invasive Animals CRC, Professor Tony Peacock, said rabbits are flexing their muscles again and are estimated to cost Australia's agricultural industries around $200 million each year as well as causing severe environmental damage. Just two rabbits per hectare can be enough to stop plant regeneration.

'The discovery of this new virus has important implications for ongoing and future rabbit control', Tony said.

In the short-term at least, rabbit control strategies in affected areas needed to focus on integrated control, using methods such as the Myxoma virus and warren destruction.

'We will need to use any existing window of opportunity to apply the lethal calicivirus more effectively and better target eradication attempts on affected populations', Tony said.

'There is also a need for more research to understand where this virus is and how it acts, so we can develop new strategies to overcome this problem and maintain benefits of biocontrol in the future.

'The discovery of the virus means we must continue developing and improving rabbit control options to reduce their impact and improve ecosystem management.'

Find out more by listening to the podcast Rabbits bouncing back from calicivirus (Podcast 7 May 09).


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