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Rabbit Oryctolagus cuniculus

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Rabbit Oryctolagus ... nose and tail Pigmentation thermolabile Mature weight 10 lbs/4.5 kg Chinchilla rabbit Mature weight 10 lbs/4.5 kgs Steel grey Flemish Giant ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Rabbit Oryctolagus cuniculus


1
Rabbit Oryctolagus cuniculus
  • Biology and Uses in Research

2
TAXONOMY
  • Class Mammalia
  • Order Lagamorpha
  • Family Leporidae
  • Genus Oryctolagus
  • Species cuninulus
  • Lagomorphs are distinguished from rodents by
    their incisor teeth.

3
Teeth
  • Lagomorphs have six incisor teeth, including the
    small teeth (frequently called peg teeth)
    directly behind the large upper incisors. By
    contrast, rodents have only four incisors.

4
General Information
  • Known as the domestic rabbit
  • Derived from European wild rabbit
  • Used as pets, meat producers or research
  • Oryctolagus cuniculus is the only genus of the
    European rabbit
  • Hares (lepus) and Cottontails (Sylvilagus) are in
    a different genera
  • Fertile cross-genera mating do occur but
    offspring are infertile

5
Breeds and Varieties
  • Over 40 different breeds/varieties recognized by
    the American Rabbit Breeder Assn
  • Only a few used in meat production and labs
  • Many bred just for show quality
  • Most have definite molting period

6
Breeds
  • Of the six genus in the Subfamily Leporinae, only
    the European rabbit, Oryctolagus cuniculus is
    commonly used in research, testing, or teaching.
  • Three of the most commonly used breeds are the
    New Zealand White, American Dutch, and
    Californian.

7
New Zealand White
  • Most commonly used
  • White
  • Most popular
  • Used for food and laboratory
  • Mature weight 10 lbs/4.5 kgs
  • Docile

8
American Dutch
  • The American Dutch rabbit, is less than half the
    size of the New Zealand White, reaching a mature
    weight of only two kilograms.
  • There are several color varieties of the American
    Dutch breed, but the most common is the black and
    white
  • Second most popular in research

9
California Rabbit
  • Primarily for food
  • White fur with dark brown tips on feet, ears,
    nose and tail
  • Pigmentation thermolabile
  • Mature weight 10 lbs/4.5 kg

10
Chinchilla rabbit
  • Mature weight 10 lbs/4.5 kgs
  • Steel grey

11
Flemish Giant
  • Checkered giant
  • Largest breed
  • Weight 13 lbs
  • Not commonly used too big
  • Mature slowly

12
Angora
  • Used for fur
  • Fur is plucked every 3 months
  • 2 2 1/2 inches

13
Netherland Dwarf
  • Smallest
  • Weight 2-3 lbs

14
Lop Eared
  • Medium size
  • Weight 5-6 lbs
  • Lop ears

15
Hair growth patterns
  • The hair growth patterns of the rabbit are
    somewhat unusual. After the rabbit's hair has
    been clipped, it may not grow back uniformly.
  • Notice in this rabbit that some patches of hair
    are longer than others. This can make
    interpretation of some skin tests difficult.

16
Skeletal mass
  • Only about 7 of the body weight of a rabbit is
    skeletal structure.
  • Compare the bone density of a cat (on the top)
    with the rabbit of approximately the same weight
    (on the bottom).
  • This is a lateral view radiograph.
  • The muscle mass of a rabbit relative to bone
    structure makes it highly susceptible to lumbar
    fracture or dislocation.

17
Dental Formula
  • 2x (2/1 I, 0/0 C, 3/3 P, 3/2 M) 28
  • Teeth grown and wear continuously

18
Vital signs
  • Normal vital signs will vary with the age and
    breed of the rabbit, but for a healthy animal
    they should fall within these ranges
  • heart rate 130 - 325
  • respiratory rate 32 -60
  • rectal temp 101.3 F 104 F

19
Urine
  • A healthy rabbit will produce about 50-75 mL of
    urine per kilogram of body weight each day. It
    will normally be dark yellow to brown and will
    appear turbid. This turbidity is due to mineral
    precipitates. Rabbit urine is normally alkaline
    with a pH of over 8.2
  • The urine forms scale (a thick mineral coating)
    on cages as it dries.

20
Feces
  • Healthy rabbits produce two types of feces.
  • The droppings seen in the pan under the cage are
    hard fecal pellets that contain mostly waste
    fiber.
  • The other type is a softer feces that is produced
    in the cecum, and is often called cecotrophs or
    night feces. This material is rich in vitamins
    and protein, and the rabbit may consume it
    directly from the anus

21
Ear
  • An important feature of rabbits is the prominent
    blood vessels in their ears.
  • Rabbit ears are NOT handles and must never be
    used for restraint! 
  • The central artery is used for collecting large
    quantities of blood. The marginal ear vein is
    used for giving IV injections or collecting
    smaller quantities of blood

22
Hematology
  • The blood volume of a rabbit is approximately 56
    ml/kg body weight.
  • Generally, 10 - 15 of the total volume can be
    taken as frequently as every two weeks without
    endangering the rabbit.

23
Hematology
  • The normal range for the red blood cell count
    is 4.5 - 7.0 x 103. The total white blood cell
    count and differential fall within the range
    expected of most other species of laboratory
    animals, as shown here
  • Total WBC 4.6 - 13 X 103
  • Lymphocytes 30 - 50
  • Neutrophils 30 - 50
  • Monocytes 0 - 3
  • Eosinophils 0 - 2
  • Basophils 0- 7 (Ref Kozma, et al.).

24
Neutrophil, eosinophil
  • The rabbit neutrophil, shown on the left,
    contains granules that stain red with eosin.
  • Because of this staining characteristic, rabbit
    neutrophils are sometimes called
    pseudoeosinophils, amphophils, or heterophils.

25
Let's look at a dissection of a rabbit to study
the internal organs that are most commonly
relevant to research uses
  • This is a sagittal section of the head showing
    the long oropharynx (red pin), large fleshy
    tongue, and the sagittal niches. It also shows
    the relationship of the esophagus (yellow pin),
    to the trachea (blue pin), epiglottis (below the
    red pin), and nasopharynx (white pin). All of
    these features combine to make passing an
    endotracheal tube difficult

26
Thoracic cavity
  • Dissection into the thoracic cavity, shows the
    heart, which is relatively small for the size of
    the animal -- about 1/2 that of a cat of the same
    size. This becomes important when attempting
    to collect blood via cardiac puncture.

27
Lungs
  • The lungs differ from each other in size and
    construction. The right lung is normally
    larger, and it has three distinct lobes, whereas
    the left has only two.
  • This image shows the bilobed left lung

28
Abdominal cavity
  • The abdominal cavity is proportionately large,
    reflecting the high roughage content of the diet.
    The liver lies above the stomach.
  • The gall bladder is buried deep in the liver, and
    cannot be seen on this image.
  • The cecum is very large, and has about ten times
    the capacity of the stomach...

29
Stomach
  • ...which is large, thin-walled, not
    compartmentalized, and relatively aglandular.
    The pH in an adult rabbit stomach is very acid

30
Female reproductive organs
  • This image shows the female reproductive organs
    -- the ovaries, uterine horns, and vagina which
    has been cut open longitudinally.
  • The uterine horns are separated their entire
    length. Each horn empties into a separate
    cervix and then into the vagina.

31
Placenta
  • The placental barrier in the rabbit is
    hemochorial, which means that the membrane
    enclosing the fetus is in direct contact with
    maternal blood. This means it is similar to the
    human barrier, making the rabbit a good model for
    studying transmission of agents through the
    placenta.

32
Reproduction
  • The female rabbit is called a doe  she is
    generally larger than the male.  Females have
    four pairs of mammary glands and often has a
    pronounced dewlap (roll of fur under her chin).
  • Male rabbits are called bucks.  Bucks have no
    mammary tissue and their inguinal canals are
    open.  Group housed bucks may fight. 
  • The rabbit is an induced ovulator and has no
    distinct estrous cycle, although she is typically
    a spring breeder.  The doe ovulates ten to twelve
    hours after mating.  When she is receptive to a
    male, she exhibits a posture called lordosis,
    elevating her hindquarters.
  • Gestation in rabbits is 29 - 35 days. 
    Parturition
  • ( kindling) occurs in the early morning in a
    nest that the doe makes by plucking fur from her
    dewlap, abdomen and sides. 

33
Sexing
  • Differentiating mature males from females is
    fairly easy. As females mature, they develop a
    soft fold of skin below their chin, from which
    they pluck hair when nesting. This is called a
    dewlap. Compare the profile of the female,
    left, with the male at the right.

34
Sexing
  • To determine sex by genitalia, gently press the
    skin back from the genital opening and stretch
    the perineum.
  • In the male, this procedure will cause the penis
    to be everted.
  • The vulva of the female has the appearance of a
    slit. This procedure is necessary when sexing
    young rabbits.

35
Use in research
36
History of the Rabbit in Research
  • Rabbits were discovered in Spain in approximately
    100 BC.  They were transported throughout the
    Roman Empire as an easily portable food source. 
  • Domestication of the rabbit probably occurred
    when French monks set up walled compounds during
    the 1500s. 
  • Rabbits have been used in research for hundreds
    of years.  In the early 1600s, rabbit eyes were
    studied and glaucoma was described. 
  • In the 1880s, Louis Pasteur did much of his
    research and testing of rabies vaccine using
    rabbits.

37
List of historical uses
  • The cause and treatment of many human diseases
    have been studied using the rabbit as a model.
    Because of its response to different diets, the
    rabbit was the first animal model used to study
    atherosclerosis. Other noninfectious diseases
    studied in the rabbit include osteoarthritis,
    pregnancy toxemia, endometrial adenocarcinoma,
    drug teratogenesis, hydrocephalus, muscular
    dystrophy, glomerulonephritis, and gallstones.

38
List (cont.)
  • Infectious diseases studied in the rabbit include
    staphylococcal infection, bacterial endocarditis,
    and Reiter's polyarthritis syndrome. Hereditary
    studies include familial hypercholesterolemia,
    dwarfism, and glaucoma.

39
Syphilis
  • There are some diseases of man for which only the
    rabbit can serve as a model. One of these is
    syphilis. The rabbit is the only other mammal in
    which syphilis occurs naturally. The causative
    agent of human syphilis, Treponema pallidium,
    cannot be grown in vitro.
  • But we can put the human organism into rabbits
    and study its growth there. If and when a vaccine
    is developed for human syphilis, trials will
    undoubtedly be conducted using the rabbit first.

40
Pet vaccination
  • Animals have also benefited from research using
    rabbits. Pasteur developed a vaccine to protect
    dogs from rabies by using dried spinal cord from
    rabbits that had been experimentally infected

41
Analogous systems
  • Four other characteristics of rabbits make them
    desirable for specific research tasks.
  • First, by analogous systems, we mean that some of
    the rabbit's organ systems are very similar to
    systems in man.
  • The rabbit is often the model of choice to study
    immune responses for this reason.

42
Size
  • Rabbits may be preferred over other common
    laboratory animals because of their size. They
    have sufficient blood volume to allow for large
    blood samples to be taken either singly or
    serially. Because of their size, they may be
    preferred over rodents for studies that require
    temperature monitoring or surgical procedures.

43
Reasons Not to Use
  • Size
  • Expense
  • Variable response to anesthetic agents
  • Prone to cardiovascular failure
  • Prone to stress related diseases (ex-coccidiosis)

44
Reproduction study
  • A doe has two uteri, each of which opens into the
    vagina through a separate cervix. This unique
    reproductive anatomy allows for an experimental
    group and a control group within a single
    biologic host.
  • Rabbits are also useful for studies that require
    precise timing during gestation, as a doe
    ovulates about ten hours after mating, and
    gestation is well defined at 30-32 days.

45
Susceptibility to disease
  • The last of these characteristics that make the
    rabbit valuable for specialized studies is its
    susceptibility to spontaneous and induced
    diseases such as syphilis, herpetic
    conjunctivitis, tumors associated with papilloma
    viruses, glaucoma, hyperlipidemia, and
    nutritional muscular dystrophy.
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