The black jackrabbit was first
described as a species in 1891 by the American naturalist
Walter E. Bryant. He described the species based on two specimens retrieved from
Isla Espíritu Santo in 1882 and brought to the
National Museum of Natural History by the American ornithologist
Lyman Belding. Bryant gave the black jackrabbit the
scientific name Lepus insularis, and noted that it was similar in size to the
black-tailed jackrabbit (
L. californicus). Its
genus name,
Lepus, meant that it belonged to the hares, and its
species name,
insularis, is derived from the
Latin word , meaning "pertaining to an island". However, it can be differentiated based on
karyotypes and
G banding, traits that have been used to justify its status as a distinctive species. Black jackrabbits likely diverged from hare species present on the
Baja California peninsula when the
Isla Espíritu Santo split off from the mainland, around 11,000 years ago. Researchers have occasionally considered the black jackrabbit to be a
melanistic form of the black-tailed jackrabbit. while the
International Union for Conservation of Nature describes it as a distinct species. There are no known subspecies of the black jackrabbit. ==Description==