Male goats, hares, and rabbits are all called "bucks."
The intact male Rabbit is called a Buck.
A male rabbit is called a buck as well as a deer, a female is a doe.
A hare is Another species. Similar but not the same. A male rabbit is a buck.
Female rabbits are called does, and males are bucks.
Hare
An entire male goat is called a buck. A castrated male goat is called a wether.
A baby rabbit is called: a kit, a kitten or a bunny The adult female is a DOE The adult male is called a BUCK
A male hare is called a buck or a jack
No, a blue-eyed rabbit can be either male or female. See the related question below for more details and helpful links with pictures about how to find out if your rabbit is male or female.
a hare (remember the tortoise and the hare?) the scientific name for the domestic rabbit is Oryctolagus cuniculus Another name (or nickname) for a rabbit is "coney". Actually, a rabbit and a hare are definitely two different animals. A baby rabbit (properly named "kit" - not "kitten") is born in a nest-lined burrow without fur, deaf, with its eyes closed, and is very vulnerable and helpless for at least 2 weeks. The fur grows within a week and the eyes open and deafness subsides in about 10 days. A baby hare, on the other hand, is born with fur, its eyes are open, and it is able to run/hop within minutes after being born - not in a burrow. (FYI: The birthing process is called "kindling")
Female Arctic Hares are called 'does', just like the female of any other species of rabbit, deer, elk, moose, or hare.
An entire male goat is called a buck. A castrated male goat is called a wether.