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some rabbits have to survive through the cold winter and it blends them in with the snow so its harder for their enemys to kill them
some rabbits have to survive through the cold winter and it blends them in with the snow so its harder for their enemys to kill them
Rabbits don't have pads on their feet -- just bone, a thin layer of fat, and skin. A rabbit's natural habitat is grassy and relatively soft, so they don't need pads on their feet. Domestic rabbits need to provided with soft surfaces to rest on, because hard surfaces are uncomfortable for rabbits and can over time lead to injuries.
I would say that a few safe foods for rabbits and guineapigs to eat would be: * carrots (thin and small, shredded) * lettuce * rabbit food from the store * guineapig food from the store * most other vegetables that are small and thin Hope this helps!
If the object is of the same width and tapers from thick to thin, it may be a wedge.
No. It differs in viscosity.
A thin atmosphere is thin and a thick atmosphere is thick
A thin atmosphere is thin and a thick atmosphere is thick
No animal doesn't live in the summer, but rabbits can be severely endangered in the summer. If they have no indoors with AC then they have a thin rish of living.
jack rabbits ears are super thin and bllood vessles are there so the wind cools the blood which cools the jack rabbit
The pair word is 'thin': thick and thin.
The ears aren't truly pink, they generally are just a lighter shade of the same colour as the rest of the rabbit's skin. However, the flesh on a rabbit's ears is very thin and they are more lightly furred. So when light passes through the capillaries carrying blood through the ears, it can give the appearance of a pink tinge. This is especially so on lighter colored animals such as white rabbits.