They breathe, with lungs.
They breathe just like you, they have lungs.
It depends on the elevation. If the rabbits were high on a mountain, the lungs would either slowly get stronger (I'm not sure if this would happen in a single generation or over maany years) or the rabbits would weaken and die.
yes they do cause there mammals
Hares breath through their nose, throat and lungs
Rabbits, like all mammals, have lungs, not gills. Lungs are the respiratory organs of mammals, including rabbits, and they are adapted for breathing air. Gills, on the other hand, are the respiratory organs of aquatic animals such as fish and some amphibians. Gills are specialized for extracting oxygen from water, whereas lungs are designed for extracting oxygen from the air. Rabbits breathe by inhaling air through their nostrils, which then passes into their lungs, where oxygen is exchanged with carbon dioxide in the blood.
Rabbits can't breath fire. If they could, it would probably be from some form of scientific heated flame in their lungs, causing fire to come forth when they breath.
Using lungs as any other mammal. There is plenty of fresh air entering the hole.
Clayton Garr Loosli has written: 'The rabbit's lung after phrenicotomy and pneumothorax ..' -- subject(s): Lungs, Rabbits
it is rabbits
Snakes, kangaroos, frogs and rabbits have the following in common:they are all vertebratesthey all breathe using lungs (though young frogs, or tadpoles, use gills and spiracles, developing their lungs later)they have skin (snakes have scaly skin, not scales, while frogs have moist skin)they are all present in Australia, though rabbits are not native to that continent
The collective nouns for rabbits are: bury of rabbits colony of rabbits down of rabbits drove of rabbits husk of rabbits leash of rabbits trace of rabbits trip of rabbits warren of rabbits nest of rabbits (young) wrack of rabbits (young) And for hares: drove of hares down of hares husk of hares leash of hares trace of hares trip of hares warren of hares I hope this is useful!