Only directly from the cows teet.
None.
Mommy rabbit milk
The reason cattle produce milk in the first place is to feed calves, not to feed people. Frisian cows in the wild--if such they be--"get rid of" their milk by letting calves suckle it.
Baby rabbits drink their mother's milk, i.e. rabbit milk. If the baby rabbit is domestic and orphaned, you can try feeding it Kitten Milk Replacer (KRM); if the rabbit is wild, use goat milk. However, it can be very, very difficult to hand-raise rabbits, especially if you aren't experienced. If you find yourself in charge of an orphaned baby rabbit, do lots of research and contact local experts in your area. See the related link below for a place to start.
Some cows milk on occasion will have no adverse effect on a cat, but it is too rich for a cat to drink on a regular basis. You will never see a grown cat in the wild drinking anything other than water, and that's what house cats should also drink on a daily basis for optimum care of their liver.
Wild mama mouse milk. lol
Well they drink two times a day night and day.The mother goes there every morning and night.These are with wild bunnys
The mother rabbit makes milk for her kits by eating a little extra food. Her body creates a liquid from the vitamins and nutrients she had just digested and creates milk!
In the wild, they eat plants, at your house, they drink from a bottle and eat pellets and hay.
it all depends if you own one i would try to have it drink out of a bottle but dont forse it if it doesnt drink try a dish where it can reach but again NEVER forse the baby bunny. if it still doesnt drink i would ask the vet
When they are un-weaned cubs, milk. When thy are weaned and adult, water.
Yes and no. Truely wild cattle (Aurochs) are extinct. However, if a domestic cow is left out in the wild by itself with very little human contact then yes, you do get a wild cow. But they are not truly wild, as they do "belong" to someone or some place.