Yes, of course.
lol marriynn rockz
You remove the skin first.
The skeleton of a horse is adapted for strength and speed with long limbs for ground clearance and fast running. In contrast, a rabbit's skeleton is adapted for agility and jumping, with shorter hind limbs and elongated hindfoot bones for powerful hopping. Both skeletons have features that enable efficient movement for their respective modes of locomotion.
boil in pickle juice for 2-3 hours on low-med heat
Rabbits have endoskeletons. That means their skeleton in on the inside surrounded by muscles, tissue, stc. Exoskeletons are on the outside of animals, like spiders.
No, rabbits are chordates - phylum Chordata, a different phylum than Arthropoda (the arthropods). Pretty much anything with an internal skeleton and backbone like mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, will be chordates. Arthropods have their skeleton on the outside (exoskeleton), like the insects or crustaceans.
In the book "Skeleton Man" by Joseph Bruchac, the antagonist is the character known as "The Flying Head." This entity, a malevolent being from Abenaki folklore, poses a threat to the main characters and serves as the primary source of conflict in the story.
skeleton system is a system about the skeleton.
"Esqueleto" is skeleton in Spanish.
It is endoskeleton. Seahorses have an interior skeleton.
Yes. It happened to mine when it died. :( Anyway, this usually happens hours after the rabbit has died because this is when the body of it starts to decompose internally. Since there in no blood flow and no organs are working, a gas forms inside of the body. This is why it's best to bury the rabbit quickly before it decomposes. I don't really think you want to see your little friend as a skeleton...
A rodent skeleton is not different from a vole skeleton. A vole skeleton is just one of many types of rodent skeleton. That is because voles are a type of rodent.