Well, if your baby rabbit has just been taken off its mother's milk, try giving them pieces of bread soaked with regular milk, and avoid skim milk for their diet. When you decide it's good for them to start eating pellets, (if you choose to feed them pellets) you can start by feeding less bread and mixing more and more pellets into their food, to avoid digestive problems. After a period of a week, or when you feel that your rabbit is comfortable with pellets, stop feeding them the bread.
Tip: After you are sure that your rabbit has been eating pellets, starting checking their droppings for loose stool and diarrhea. If that is the case, then ask a vet or local pet store for a brand that will be better for your bunny.
they eat plants or they might wander into a garden and eat.
pellets, grass, timothy hay, carrots, and cheerios.
A pet bunny eats many things like lettuce, carots, or go to a local pet shop and bye baby bunny food.
They eat grass, hay, apples, carrots, and pellets.
Wild baby rabbits can eat rabbit pellets, hay and carrots when they are two weeks old. Before that you should hand feed them.
Wild calico rabbits do not exist as a normality. Someone has turned them loose and they have reproduced. They eat what all wild OR domestic rabbits eat; alfalfa, grasses and herbs. (as well as carrots from mr. MacGregor's garden.
Yes, they do.
Greens.
They eat many diffrebnt things such ass
it all depends on how much they eat.
Wild turkeys do not eat baby rabbits. Wild turkeys do not eat any kind of meat because they are vegetarians.
Wild baby rabbits can eat rabbit pellets, hay and carrots when they are two weeks old. Before that you should hand feed them.
No.
Yes, wild cats do hunt rabbits. On many occasions, a cat will hunt the baby rabbits for food.
no
Wild calico rabbits do not exist as a normality. Someone has turned them loose and they have reproduced. They eat what all wild OR domestic rabbits eat; alfalfa, grasses and herbs. (as well as carrots from mr. MacGregor's garden.
NO.
Yes, they do.
Greens.
yes
No rabbits eat their feces, although all rabbits eat cecotropes. Rabbits have two kinds of droppings: feces, and cecotropes. Baby rabbits that aren't weaned yet eat their mother's cecotropes; once they're weaned, they eat their own cecotropes.