No. Rabbits are lagomorphs and humans aren't.
There are many different rabbit species. See the link below for a list of different rabbit species. All domestic rabbits belong to the European Rabbit species (Oryctolagus cuniculus).
Yes Pasteurella multocida and possibly other species are zoonotic bacterial infectious agents (meaning, it can spread from animals to humans).
There is no animal known as the "Swits rabbit." Different rabbit species have different scientific names, and there's many different rabbit species. All domestic rabbits belong to the European Rabbit species and their scientific name is Oryctolagus cuniculus.
All domestic rabbits belong to the European Rabbit species (Oryctolagus cuniculus).
A domestic rabbit is a rabbit that has been domesticated, which means it is cared for by humans and doesn't live in the wild.Domestic rabbits are from the European Rabbit species. They live all over the world.Domestic rabbits are kept for several reasons:PetMeat and/or furResearch/lab animalPerformance (e.g. magician's rabbits, movie/TV)
I would say NO. Rabbits can of course get infested with lice, but normally not the type that infests us humans. If we humans have got headlice, then the headlice are not likely to infest the rabbit. Different species has got different parasites to cope with. There is only a few parasites that infect many different species. And even so, carnivore species (meat-eating) can all get certain parasites where as species not eating meat normally do not.
There is more than one species of large rabbit, and each species has its own scientific name. All domestic rabbits, including large ones, belong to the European Rabbit species and their scientific name is Oryctolagus cuniculus.
Cuniculus
There are many species of rabbit, and each species has its own common name (in English and other languages) and its own scientific name.Pet rabbits are called European Rabbits (their common species name) and Oryctolagus cuniculus (their scientific species name).
no
They are the same species (European Rabbit), but they are different breeds.
if it happens to be a burrowing rabbit species, if chased will hide out in its burrow