Subspecies and Distribution. L. t. timidus Linnaeus, 1758 — Scandinavia S to 59° N, N Russia (S to 57° N to 58° N) to E of Ural Mts, Estonia, perhaps Poland, and Altai and Beita Mts in N Xinjiang (China); from Sweden extending in hybrid zones with the subspecies sylvaticus to S coast of Norway and W Latvia. L. t. abet Kuroda, 1938 — Kurile Is (Russia). L. t. ainu Barrett-Hamilton, 1900 — Hokkaido (Japan). L. t. begitschevi Koljuschev, 1936 — Taimyr Peninsula (Russia). L. t. gichiganus J. A. Allen, 1903 — C Yakutia, Kamchatka and Okhotsk Sea coast (Russia). L. t. hibernicus Bell, 1837 — Ireland. L. t. kolymensis Ognev, 1922 — NE Siberia (Russia). L. t. kozhevnikovi Ognev, 1929 — C Russia from 57° to 58°N, whereit intergrades with the nomonotypical timidus S to 53° N. The W boundary is unclear. L. t. lugubris Kastschenko, 1899 — Siberian Altai Mts (Russia). L. t. mordeni Goodwin, 1933 — Russian Far East (Ussuri Valley and lower and middle Amur River) and Heilongjiang (China). L. t. ori Kuroda, 1928 — Sakhalin (Russia). L. t. scoticus Hilzheimer, 1906 — Scotland. L. t. sibiricorumJohansen, 1923 — W & SW Siberia (Russia), N Kazakhstan, and Tacheng Mts in N Xinjiang (China). L. t. sylvaticus Nilsson, 1831 —S Sweden, extending in hybrid zones with nominotypical timidus to S coast of Norway and W Latvia. L. t. transbaikalicus Ognev, 1929 — Trans-Baikal region in E Siberia (Russia) and E Inner Mongolia (= Nei Mongol, China). L. t. varronis Miller, 1901 — at high altitudes in the Alps, C Europe. in Leporidae

Subspecies and Distribution. L. t. timidus Linnaeus, 1758 — Scandinavia S to 59° N, N Russia (S to 57° N to 58° N) to E of Ural Mts, Estonia, perhaps Poland, and Altai and Beita Mts in N Xinjiang (China); from Sweden extending in hybrid zones with the subspecies sylvaticus to S coast of Norway and W...

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Main Authors: Don E. Wilson, Thomas E. Lacher, Jr, Russell A. Mittermeier
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: Lynx Edicions 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6625681
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author Don E. Wilson
Thomas E. Lacher, Jr
Russell A. Mittermeier
author_facet Don E. Wilson
Thomas E. Lacher, Jr
Russell A. Mittermeier
author_sort Don E. Wilson
collection Zenodo
description Subspecies and Distribution. L. t. timidus Linnaeus, 1758 — Scandinavia S to 59° N, N Russia (S to 57° N to 58° N) to E of Ural Mts, Estonia, perhaps Poland, and Altai and Beita Mts in N Xinjiang (China); from Sweden extending in hybrid zones with the subspecies sylvaticus to S coast of Norway and W Latvia. L. t. abet Kuroda, 1938 — Kurile Is (Russia). L. t. ainu Barrett-Hamilton, 1900 — Hokkaido (Japan). L. t. begitschevi Koljuschev, 1936 — Taimyr Peninsula (Russia). L. t. gichiganus J. A. Allen, 1903 — C Yakutia, Kamchatka and Okhotsk Sea coast (Russia). L. t. hibernicus Bell, 1837 — Ireland. L. t. kolymensis Ognev, 1922 — NE Siberia (Russia). L. t. kozhevnikovi Ognev, 1929 — C Russia from 57° to 58°N, whereit intergrades with the nomonotypical timidus S to 53° N. The W boundary is unclear. L. t. lugubris Kastschenko, 1899 — Siberian Altai Mts (Russia). L. t. mordeni Goodwin, 1933 — Russian Far East (Ussuri Valley and lower and middle Amur River) and Heilongjiang (China). L. t. ori Kuroda, 1928 — Sakhalin (Russia). L. t. scoticus Hilzheimer, 1906 — Scotland. L. t. sibiricorumJohansen, 1923 — W & SW Siberia (Russia), N Kazakhstan, and Tacheng Mts in N Xinjiang (China). L. t. sylvaticus Nilsson, 1831 —S Sweden, extending in hybrid zones with nominotypical timidus to S coast of Norway and W Latvia. L. t. transbaikalicus Ognev, 1929 — Trans-Baikal region in E Siberia (Russia) and E Inner Mongolia (= Nei Mongol, China). L. t. varronis Miller, 1901 — at high altitudes in the Alps, C Europe. Published as part of Don E. Wilson, Thomas E. Lacher, Jr & Russell A. Mittermeier, 2016, Leporidae, pp. 107-148 in Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 6 Lagomorphs and Rodents I, Barcelona :Lynx Edicions on page 145, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.6625539
format Other/Unknown Material
genre Kamchatka
Lepus timidus
okhotsk sea
Sakhalin
Taimyr
Yakutia
Lynx
Siberia
genre_facet Kamchatka
Lepus timidus
okhotsk sea
Sakhalin
Taimyr
Yakutia
Lynx
Siberia
geographic Okhotsk
Norway
Barrett
Goodwin
geographic_facet Okhotsk
Norway
Barrett
Goodwin
id ftzenodo:oai:zenodo.org:6625681
institution Open Polar
language unknown
long_lat ENVELOPE(-126.773,-126.773,54.428,54.428)
ENVELOPE(-62.833,-62.833,-65.100,-65.100)
op_collection_id ftzenodo
op_relation https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6625539
lsid:urn:lsid:plazi.org:pub:FFBB5B70B747FFF9FFABFFBBFFCBF65E
http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFBB5B70B747FFF9FFABFFBBFFCBF65E
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6625488
http://treatment.plazi.org/id/03822308B761FFD1FAFCF9FFFC16F4AB
https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6625680
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6625681
oai:zenodo.org:6625681
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
License Not Specified
publishDate 2016
publisher Lynx Edicions
record_format openpolar
spelling ftzenodo:oai:zenodo.org:6625681 2025-01-16T22:49:16+00:00 Subspecies and Distribution. L. t. timidus Linnaeus, 1758 — Scandinavia S to 59° N, N Russia (S to 57° N to 58° N) to E of Ural Mts, Estonia, perhaps Poland, and Altai and Beita Mts in N Xinjiang (China); from Sweden extending in hybrid zones with the subspecies sylvaticus to S coast of Norway and W Latvia. L. t. abet Kuroda, 1938 — Kurile Is (Russia). L. t. ainu Barrett-Hamilton, 1900 — Hokkaido (Japan). L. t. begitschevi Koljuschev, 1936 — Taimyr Peninsula (Russia). L. t. gichiganus J. A. Allen, 1903 — C Yakutia, Kamchatka and Okhotsk Sea coast (Russia). L. t. hibernicus Bell, 1837 — Ireland. L. t. kolymensis Ognev, 1922 — NE Siberia (Russia). L. t. kozhevnikovi Ognev, 1929 — C Russia from 57° to 58°N, whereit intergrades with the nomonotypical timidus S to 53° N. The W boundary is unclear. L. t. lugubris Kastschenko, 1899 — Siberian Altai Mts (Russia). L. t. mordeni Goodwin, 1933 — Russian Far East (Ussuri Valley and lower and middle Amur River) and Heilongjiang (China). L. t. ori Kuroda, 1928 — Sakhalin (Russia). L. t. scoticus Hilzheimer, 1906 — Scotland. L. t. sibiricorumJohansen, 1923 — W & SW Siberia (Russia), N Kazakhstan, and Tacheng Mts in N Xinjiang (China). L. t. sylvaticus Nilsson, 1831 —S Sweden, extending in hybrid zones with nominotypical timidus to S coast of Norway and W Latvia. L. t. transbaikalicus Ognev, 1929 — Trans-Baikal region in E Siberia (Russia) and E Inner Mongolia (= Nei Mongol, China). L. t. varronis Miller, 1901 — at high altitudes in the Alps, C Europe. in Leporidae Don E. Wilson Thomas E. Lacher, Jr Russell A. Mittermeier 2016-07-31 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6625681 unknown Lynx Edicions https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6625539 lsid:urn:lsid:plazi.org:pub:FFBB5B70B747FFF9FFABFFBBFFCBF65E http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFBB5B70B747FFF9FFABFFBBFFCBF65E https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6625488 http://treatment.plazi.org/id/03822308B761FFD1FAFCF9FFFC16F4AB https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6625680 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6625681 oai:zenodo.org:6625681 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess License Not Specified Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Chordata Mammalia Lagomorpha Leporidae Lepus Lepus timidus info:eu-repo/semantics/other 2016 ftzenodo 2024-12-05T23:20:35Z Subspecies and Distribution. L. t. timidus Linnaeus, 1758 — Scandinavia S to 59° N, N Russia (S to 57° N to 58° N) to E of Ural Mts, Estonia, perhaps Poland, and Altai and Beita Mts in N Xinjiang (China); from Sweden extending in hybrid zones with the subspecies sylvaticus to S coast of Norway and W Latvia. L. t. abet Kuroda, 1938 — Kurile Is (Russia). L. t. ainu Barrett-Hamilton, 1900 — Hokkaido (Japan). L. t. begitschevi Koljuschev, 1936 — Taimyr Peninsula (Russia). L. t. gichiganus J. A. Allen, 1903 — C Yakutia, Kamchatka and Okhotsk Sea coast (Russia). L. t. hibernicus Bell, 1837 — Ireland. L. t. kolymensis Ognev, 1922 — NE Siberia (Russia). L. t. kozhevnikovi Ognev, 1929 — C Russia from 57° to 58°N, whereit intergrades with the nomonotypical timidus S to 53° N. The W boundary is unclear. L. t. lugubris Kastschenko, 1899 — Siberian Altai Mts (Russia). L. t. mordeni Goodwin, 1933 — Russian Far East (Ussuri Valley and lower and middle Amur River) and Heilongjiang (China). L. t. ori Kuroda, 1928 — Sakhalin (Russia). L. t. scoticus Hilzheimer, 1906 — Scotland. L. t. sibiricorumJohansen, 1923 — W & SW Siberia (Russia), N Kazakhstan, and Tacheng Mts in N Xinjiang (China). L. t. sylvaticus Nilsson, 1831 —S Sweden, extending in hybrid zones with nominotypical timidus to S coast of Norway and W Latvia. L. t. transbaikalicus Ognev, 1929 — Trans-Baikal region in E Siberia (Russia) and E Inner Mongolia (= Nei Mongol, China). L. t. varronis Miller, 1901 — at high altitudes in the Alps, C Europe. Published as part of Don E. Wilson, Thomas E. Lacher, Jr & Russell A. Mittermeier, 2016, Leporidae, pp. 107-148 in Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 6 Lagomorphs and Rodents I, Barcelona :Lynx Edicions on page 145, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.6625539 Other/Unknown Material Kamchatka Lepus timidus okhotsk sea Sakhalin Taimyr Yakutia Lynx Siberia Zenodo Okhotsk Norway Barrett ENVELOPE(-126.773,-126.773,54.428,54.428) Goodwin ENVELOPE(-62.833,-62.833,-65.100,-65.100)
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Chordata
Mammalia
Lagomorpha
Leporidae
Lepus
Lepus timidus
Don E. Wilson
Thomas E. Lacher, Jr
Russell A. Mittermeier
Subspecies and Distribution. L. t. timidus Linnaeus, 1758 — Scandinavia S to 59° N, N Russia (S to 57° N to 58° N) to E of Ural Mts, Estonia, perhaps Poland, and Altai and Beita Mts in N Xinjiang (China); from Sweden extending in hybrid zones with the subspecies sylvaticus to S coast of Norway and W Latvia. L. t. abet Kuroda, 1938 — Kurile Is (Russia). L. t. ainu Barrett-Hamilton, 1900 — Hokkaido (Japan). L. t. begitschevi Koljuschev, 1936 — Taimyr Peninsula (Russia). L. t. gichiganus J. A. Allen, 1903 — C Yakutia, Kamchatka and Okhotsk Sea coast (Russia). L. t. hibernicus Bell, 1837 — Ireland. L. t. kolymensis Ognev, 1922 — NE Siberia (Russia). L. t. kozhevnikovi Ognev, 1929 — C Russia from 57° to 58°N, whereit intergrades with the nomonotypical timidus S to 53° N. The W boundary is unclear. L. t. lugubris Kastschenko, 1899 — Siberian Altai Mts (Russia). L. t. mordeni Goodwin, 1933 — Russian Far East (Ussuri Valley and lower and middle Amur River) and Heilongjiang (China). L. t. ori Kuroda, 1928 — Sakhalin (Russia). L. t. scoticus Hilzheimer, 1906 — Scotland. L. t. sibiricorumJohansen, 1923 — W & SW Siberia (Russia), N Kazakhstan, and Tacheng Mts in N Xinjiang (China). L. t. sylvaticus Nilsson, 1831 —S Sweden, extending in hybrid zones with nominotypical timidus to S coast of Norway and W Latvia. L. t. transbaikalicus Ognev, 1929 — Trans-Baikal region in E Siberia (Russia) and E Inner Mongolia (= Nei Mongol, China). L. t. varronis Miller, 1901 — at high altitudes in the Alps, C Europe. in Leporidae
title Subspecies and Distribution. L. t. timidus Linnaeus, 1758 — Scandinavia S to 59° N, N Russia (S to 57° N to 58° N) to E of Ural Mts, Estonia, perhaps Poland, and Altai and Beita Mts in N Xinjiang (China); from Sweden extending in hybrid zones with the subspecies sylvaticus to S coast of Norway and W Latvia. L. t. abet Kuroda, 1938 — Kurile Is (Russia). L. t. ainu Barrett-Hamilton, 1900 — Hokkaido (Japan). L. t. begitschevi Koljuschev, 1936 — Taimyr Peninsula (Russia). L. t. gichiganus J. A. Allen, 1903 — C Yakutia, Kamchatka and Okhotsk Sea coast (Russia). L. t. hibernicus Bell, 1837 — Ireland. L. t. kolymensis Ognev, 1922 — NE Siberia (Russia). L. t. kozhevnikovi Ognev, 1929 — C Russia from 57° to 58°N, whereit intergrades with the nomonotypical timidus S to 53° N. The W boundary is unclear. L. t. lugubris Kastschenko, 1899 — Siberian Altai Mts (Russia). L. t. mordeni Goodwin, 1933 — Russian Far East (Ussuri Valley and lower and middle Amur River) and Heilongjiang (China). L. t. ori Kuroda, 1928 — Sakhalin (Russia). L. t. scoticus Hilzheimer, 1906 — Scotland. L. t. sibiricorumJohansen, 1923 — W & SW Siberia (Russia), N Kazakhstan, and Tacheng Mts in N Xinjiang (China). L. t. sylvaticus Nilsson, 1831 —S Sweden, extending in hybrid zones with nominotypical timidus to S coast of Norway and W Latvia. L. t. transbaikalicus Ognev, 1929 — Trans-Baikal region in E Siberia (Russia) and E Inner Mongolia (= Nei Mongol, China). L. t. varronis Miller, 1901 — at high altitudes in the Alps, C Europe. in Leporidae
title_full Subspecies and Distribution. L. t. timidus Linnaeus, 1758 — Scandinavia S to 59° N, N Russia (S to 57° N to 58° N) to E of Ural Mts, Estonia, perhaps Poland, and Altai and Beita Mts in N Xinjiang (China); from Sweden extending in hybrid zones with the subspecies sylvaticus to S coast of Norway and W Latvia. L. t. abet Kuroda, 1938 — Kurile Is (Russia). L. t. ainu Barrett-Hamilton, 1900 — Hokkaido (Japan). L. t. begitschevi Koljuschev, 1936 — Taimyr Peninsula (Russia). L. t. gichiganus J. A. Allen, 1903 — C Yakutia, Kamchatka and Okhotsk Sea coast (Russia). L. t. hibernicus Bell, 1837 — Ireland. L. t. kolymensis Ognev, 1922 — NE Siberia (Russia). L. t. kozhevnikovi Ognev, 1929 — C Russia from 57° to 58°N, whereit intergrades with the nomonotypical timidus S to 53° N. The W boundary is unclear. L. t. lugubris Kastschenko, 1899 — Siberian Altai Mts (Russia). L. t. mordeni Goodwin, 1933 — Russian Far East (Ussuri Valley and lower and middle Amur River) and Heilongjiang (China). L. t. ori Kuroda, 1928 — Sakhalin (Russia). L. t. scoticus Hilzheimer, 1906 — Scotland. L. t. sibiricorumJohansen, 1923 — W & SW Siberia (Russia), N Kazakhstan, and Tacheng Mts in N Xinjiang (China). L. t. sylvaticus Nilsson, 1831 —S Sweden, extending in hybrid zones with nominotypical timidus to S coast of Norway and W Latvia. L. t. transbaikalicus Ognev, 1929 — Trans-Baikal region in E Siberia (Russia) and E Inner Mongolia (= Nei Mongol, China). L. t. varronis Miller, 1901 — at high altitudes in the Alps, C Europe. in Leporidae
title_fullStr Subspecies and Distribution. L. t. timidus Linnaeus, 1758 — Scandinavia S to 59° N, N Russia (S to 57° N to 58° N) to E of Ural Mts, Estonia, perhaps Poland, and Altai and Beita Mts in N Xinjiang (China); from Sweden extending in hybrid zones with the subspecies sylvaticus to S coast of Norway and W Latvia. L. t. abet Kuroda, 1938 — Kurile Is (Russia). L. t. ainu Barrett-Hamilton, 1900 — Hokkaido (Japan). L. t. begitschevi Koljuschev, 1936 — Taimyr Peninsula (Russia). L. t. gichiganus J. A. Allen, 1903 — C Yakutia, Kamchatka and Okhotsk Sea coast (Russia). L. t. hibernicus Bell, 1837 — Ireland. L. t. kolymensis Ognev, 1922 — NE Siberia (Russia). L. t. kozhevnikovi Ognev, 1929 — C Russia from 57° to 58°N, whereit intergrades with the nomonotypical timidus S to 53° N. The W boundary is unclear. L. t. lugubris Kastschenko, 1899 — Siberian Altai Mts (Russia). L. t. mordeni Goodwin, 1933 — Russian Far East (Ussuri Valley and lower and middle Amur River) and Heilongjiang (China). L. t. ori Kuroda, 1928 — Sakhalin (Russia). L. t. scoticus Hilzheimer, 1906 — Scotland. L. t. sibiricorumJohansen, 1923 — W & SW Siberia (Russia), N Kazakhstan, and Tacheng Mts in N Xinjiang (China). L. t. sylvaticus Nilsson, 1831 —S Sweden, extending in hybrid zones with nominotypical timidus to S coast of Norway and W Latvia. L. t. transbaikalicus Ognev, 1929 — Trans-Baikal region in E Siberia (Russia) and E Inner Mongolia (= Nei Mongol, China). L. t. varronis Miller, 1901 — at high altitudes in the Alps, C Europe. in Leporidae
title_full_unstemmed Subspecies and Distribution. L. t. timidus Linnaeus, 1758 — Scandinavia S to 59° N, N Russia (S to 57° N to 58° N) to E of Ural Mts, Estonia, perhaps Poland, and Altai and Beita Mts in N Xinjiang (China); from Sweden extending in hybrid zones with the subspecies sylvaticus to S coast of Norway and W Latvia. L. t. abet Kuroda, 1938 — Kurile Is (Russia). L. t. ainu Barrett-Hamilton, 1900 — Hokkaido (Japan). L. t. begitschevi Koljuschev, 1936 — Taimyr Peninsula (Russia). L. t. gichiganus J. A. Allen, 1903 — C Yakutia, Kamchatka and Okhotsk Sea coast (Russia). L. t. hibernicus Bell, 1837 — Ireland. L. t. kolymensis Ognev, 1922 — NE Siberia (Russia). L. t. kozhevnikovi Ognev, 1929 — C Russia from 57° to 58°N, whereit intergrades with the nomonotypical timidus S to 53° N. The W boundary is unclear. L. t. lugubris Kastschenko, 1899 — Siberian Altai Mts (Russia). L. t. mordeni Goodwin, 1933 — Russian Far East (Ussuri Valley and lower and middle Amur River) and Heilongjiang (China). L. t. ori Kuroda, 1928 — Sakhalin (Russia). L. t. scoticus Hilzheimer, 1906 — Scotland. L. t. sibiricorumJohansen, 1923 — W & SW Siberia (Russia), N Kazakhstan, and Tacheng Mts in N Xinjiang (China). L. t. sylvaticus Nilsson, 1831 —S Sweden, extending in hybrid zones with nominotypical timidus to S coast of Norway and W Latvia. L. t. transbaikalicus Ognev, 1929 — Trans-Baikal region in E Siberia (Russia) and E Inner Mongolia (= Nei Mongol, China). L. t. varronis Miller, 1901 — at high altitudes in the Alps, C Europe. in Leporidae
title_short Subspecies and Distribution. L. t. timidus Linnaeus, 1758 — Scandinavia S to 59° N, N Russia (S to 57° N to 58° N) to E of Ural Mts, Estonia, perhaps Poland, and Altai and Beita Mts in N Xinjiang (China); from Sweden extending in hybrid zones with the subspecies sylvaticus to S coast of Norway and W Latvia. L. t. abet Kuroda, 1938 — Kurile Is (Russia). L. t. ainu Barrett-Hamilton, 1900 — Hokkaido (Japan). L. t. begitschevi Koljuschev, 1936 — Taimyr Peninsula (Russia). L. t. gichiganus J. A. Allen, 1903 — C Yakutia, Kamchatka and Okhotsk Sea coast (Russia). L. t. hibernicus Bell, 1837 — Ireland. L. t. kolymensis Ognev, 1922 — NE Siberia (Russia). L. t. kozhevnikovi Ognev, 1929 — C Russia from 57° to 58°N, whereit intergrades with the nomonotypical timidus S to 53° N. The W boundary is unclear. L. t. lugubris Kastschenko, 1899 — Siberian Altai Mts (Russia). L. t. mordeni Goodwin, 1933 — Russian Far East (Ussuri Valley and lower and middle Amur River) and Heilongjiang (China). L. t. ori Kuroda, 1928 — Sakhalin (Russia). L. t. scoticus Hilzheimer, 1906 — Scotland. L. t. sibiricorumJohansen, 1923 — W & SW Siberia (Russia), N Kazakhstan, and Tacheng Mts in N Xinjiang (China). L. t. sylvaticus Nilsson, 1831 —S Sweden, extending in hybrid zones with nominotypical timidus to S coast of Norway and W Latvia. L. t. transbaikalicus Ognev, 1929 — Trans-Baikal region in E Siberia (Russia) and E Inner Mongolia (= Nei Mongol, China). L. t. varronis Miller, 1901 — at high altitudes in the Alps, C Europe. in Leporidae
title_sort subspecies and distribution. l. t. timidus linnaeus, 1758 — scandinavia s to 59° n, n russia (s to 57° n to 58° n) to e of ural mts, estonia, perhaps poland, and altai and beita mts in n xinjiang (china); from sweden extending in hybrid zones with the subspecies sylvaticus to s coast of norway and w latvia. l. t. abet kuroda, 1938 — kurile is (russia). l. t. ainu barrett-hamilton, 1900 — hokkaido (japan). l. t. begitschevi koljuschev, 1936 — taimyr peninsula (russia). l. t. gichiganus j. a. allen, 1903 — c yakutia, kamchatka and okhotsk sea coast (russia). l. t. hibernicus bell, 1837 — ireland. l. t. kolymensis ognev, 1922 — ne siberia (russia). l. t. kozhevnikovi ognev, 1929 — c russia from 57° to 58°n, whereit intergrades with the nomonotypical timidus s to 53° n. the w boundary is unclear. l. t. lugubris kastschenko, 1899 — siberian altai mts (russia). l. t. mordeni goodwin, 1933 — russian far east (ussuri valley and lower and middle amur river) and heilongjiang (china). l. t. ori kuroda, 1928 — sakhalin (russia). l. t. scoticus hilzheimer, 1906 — scotland. l. t. sibiricorumjohansen, 1923 — w & sw siberia (russia), n kazakhstan, and tacheng mts in n xinjiang (china). l. t. sylvaticus nilsson, 1831 —s sweden, extending in hybrid zones with nominotypical timidus to s coast of norway and w latvia. l. t. transbaikalicus ognev, 1929 — trans-baikal region in e siberia (russia) and e inner mongolia (= nei mongol, china). l. t. varronis miller, 1901 — at high altitudes in the alps, c europe. in leporidae
topic Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Chordata
Mammalia
Lagomorpha
Leporidae
Lepus
Lepus timidus
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Chordata
Mammalia
Lagomorpha
Leporidae
Lepus
Lepus timidus
url https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6625681