Hares will eat meat only in desperate situations, however its digestive system was not designed to digest meat so it could make it ill.
The Arctic Hare is a herbivore, and would not eat meat.
no because RABBITS don't even eat meat i don't think a hare could.
Arctic Hares do not eat Lemmings nor do they eat any meat. Arctic Hares are herbivores which means they only eat vegetation. Lemmings are also herbivores.
A bear, because they eat meat and berries A bear, because they eat meat and berries
yes they do. Infact they eat hares, warthhogs, birds and sheep. They can also eat bigger things like young wildebeest.
Cheetah cubs start out drinking their mother's milk, like all young mammals. Eventually, their teeth develop enough that they can eat meat, and so their mother shares her kills with them. Shortly after that, they are weaned and only eat meat.
snowy owls are the ones that mostly eat Arctic hares
Pumas get energy by mostly eating deers and also porcupines,rabbits,hares and rodents but at the zoo pumas eat carnivore diet (meat) or sometimes bones.
North American "rabbits" are all actually hares, even our common Cotton Tail and Snowshoe. They live in nests in thickets and wood piles and occasionally they will move into an abbandoned burrow but they never dig their own. They eat sweet grasses, such as timothy. alfalfa, clover and garden greens. In the winter, when food is scarce they will eat bark from sapplings and cedar. They are preyed upon by every animal that eats meat, from housecat to bears, raptors and man, even squirrels will raid a hares nest to eat the young. The size of their litters vary effected by local hare population and availability of food.
yes
Of course, rabbits and hares are in the same family of Legamorphs.
Arctic foxes are omnivores. The arctic fox will generally eat any meat it can find, including lemmings and Arctic Hares