ALDOUS-LIFE HISTORY OF SNOWSHOE HARES 
 
31 and March 17, 1932. After each capture this hare was carried one-half

mile away, where he was released on Green's Island. The interval in days

that elapsed between each release and subsequent retrapping at the original

station was 7, 8, 15, 6, 4, and 5, respectively. This hare, whenever caught,

fought the trap by plunging against the wires of the sides and end in an

endeavor to escape. In so doing it succeeded in peeling the skin of the face

from the nostrils to the base of the ears. After the seventh time in this

trap he was carried to the three mile point and released, and was never 
retrapped. 
LITERATURE CITED 
AUDUBON, J. J., and J. BACHMAN. 1851. Quadrupeds of North America. Vol. 1,
pp. 
93-106. 
BAKER, F. S., C. F. KORSTIAN, and N. J. FETEROLF. 1921. Snowshoe rabbits
and 
conifers in the Wasatch Mountains of Utah. Ecol., vol. 2, pp. 101-108. 
GILLETT, F. C. 1934. Michigan Dept. Conservation Monthly Bull., vol. 4, no.
2. 
GRANGE, WALLACE B. 1932. Observations on the snowshoe hare, Lepus americanus

phaeonotus Allen. Jour. Mamm., vol. 13, pp. 1-19. 
KLUGH, A. B. 1926. The life of the varying hare. Nat. Mag., vol. 7, pp. 228-230.

SEToN, E. T. 1929. Lives of game animals. Vol. 4, pp. 441-587. 
SOPER, J. D. 1921. Notes on the snowshoe rabbit. Jour. Mamm., vol. 2, pp.
101-108. 
VORHIES, C. T., and W. P. TAYLOR. 1933. The life histories and ecology of
jack 
rabbits, Lepus alleni and Lepus californicus, in relation to grazing in Arizona.

Tech. Bull. no. 49, Arizona Exper. Sta., pp. 471-587. 
U. S. Biological Survey, University of Maine, Orono, Maine.