Meet the 5 Rabbit Species You Can Find in Yosemite National Park
Picture yourself hiking through Tuolumne Meadows at dawn when a flash of white catches your eye—a rabbit, but not just any rabbit.
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Picture yourself hiking through Tuolumne Meadows at dawn when a flash of white catches your eye—a rabbit, but not just any rabbit.
Stand quietly at dawn near Logan Pass and you might witness something remarkable—a snowshoe hare in its brilliant white winter coat bounding across a snowy slope, or perhaps a white-tailed jackrabbit emerging from a sagebrush form on the eastern grasslands.
While most mammals at Joshua Tree National Park hide during the scorching daylight hours, one group defies this desert survival strategy entirely.
While grizzly bears and wolves capture most visitor attention at Yellowstone National Park, a quieter drama unfolds among the park’s smallest mammals.
Practically every visitor to Rocky Mountain National Park sees squirrels—in fact, you’re more likely to encounter these energetic rodents than any other mammal in the park.
While Yellowstone National Park is famous for its grizzly bears, wolves, and massive bison herds, you’re actually far more likely to encounter the park’s smallest mammals during your visit.
Every evening at Carlsbad Caverns, nearly 400,000 Brazilian free-tailed bats create one of nature’s most spectacular displays as they spiral out of the cave entrance.