For the first time in four decades, scientists have announced a confirmed sighting of a critically endangered hare in part of its native range, after spotting its completely flattened carcass on a roadside.

Researchers were traveling for fieldwork on Hainan, an island in southern China, when one member spotted the roadkill by chance. Despite the carcass’s severely damaged condition, they immediately recognized it as the little-known Hainan hare (Lepus hainanus). The species, which is found only on Hainan, is among the world’s most understudied lagomorphs, the mammal group that includes rabbits, hares and pikas.

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The hare was killed by a vehicle and was found along Pulongxian Highway in northeast Hainan on Dec. 25, 2024. (Image credit: Kadoorie Farm and Botanic Garden)

Although the hare is known to survive in some areas of western Hainan, particularly the Datian National Nature Reserve, the roadkill incident represents the first confirmed documentation of this species from northeastern Hainan since 1986, suggesting that an overlooked remnant population still exists in the region, according to the study.

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