27 June 2013

Papilloma virus may explain the "jackalope" legend


The photo is one of three images of a diseased rabbit, explained at Reddit as suffering from a viral infection:
The cottontail rabbit papilloma virus (CRPV), or Shope papilloma virus, is a type I virus under the Baltimore scheme, possessing a nonsegmented dsDNA genome. It infects rabbits, causing keratinous carcinomas, typically on or near the animal’s head. These tumors can become large enough that they interfere with the host’s ability to eat, eventually causing starvation.
The Wikipedia entry adds:
The virus is also a possible source of myths about the jackalope, a rabbit with the antlers
of an antelope, and related cryptids such as the wolpertinger. Stories and illustrations of horned rabbits appear in scientific treatises dating back many years, such as the Tableau encyclopédique et méthodique, from 1789 [image at right]

3 comments:

  1. That poor animal. That's what I hate about the internet: you see all kinds of things you have no power to fix. =^(

    It's too much to hope that he got them removed... I just hope he didn't suffer.

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    Replies
    1. Just to add, I read that these growths are not cancers ~ being made from keratin, they're actually more like warts ~ and can also get smaller and disappear within their next six months, too. I hope this rabbit's immune system healed him.

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  2. how dare cancer viruses be so damn interesting

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