Well by "bunnies" i presume you mean pet rabbits. They would survive a night in freezing temperatures if they have lots of straw and or other bedding to nest up in but may struggle for a prolonged period of freezing temperatures so best to move them to someplace warmer. If you mean wild rabbits then as long as they had a deep enough burrow they would, also the more of them there are down the burrow, the better chance they have. but the same applies as pet rabbits, if its a prolonged period of freezing then the less chance they have.
Bunnies CANNOT stay out in the cold.
Uh...NO!
In Warrens or in rabbit hutches
Raccoons are able to live at temperatures well below 0 degrees F to over 100 degrees F.
No Gray Wolves live in den not burrows Bunnies,Hares,and other small animals live in burrows.
no they cannot because bunnies and rabbits are very territorial and always kick so they can kick a guinea pig and injure it or maybe kill it
If they are both girls, they might have babies at the same time. Bunnies and dogs cannot have babies together.
Yes. Pet Bunnies can live outside as long as you keep them in a cage with food and water.
Do bunnies live in holes if so they eat Carrot's
penguins live in temperatures that drop to 112 degrees below zero
Yes, if temperatures are between 50 and 130 degrees.
No, Bunnies did not live during the time of the dinosaurs
Floppy-eared bunnies are domestic animals; they don't exist in the wild -- so, they live wherever humans keep them! See the related question below for info and links about what pet rabbits need in their habitats/cages.
yea
where do arctic bunnies live
in holes
To be safe.
Pumas can live in southern Canada where temperatures may drop well below 0 degrees F. in winter to temperatures exceeding 100 degrees F. in the deserts of the southwestern United States in the summer.
No they live in rabbit hutches.