less than a foot?
Is the mother a wild rabbit and you just found the baby rabbits? If so, leave them where they are. If the mother is Domestic and inside, as long as the room they are kept in is warm they should be fine. If they are outside in a hutch, a nesting box would be advised.
from ground level of 1 meter
Get a computer cam an hang it in the nesting box but maybe you should ask someone else becouse im only 11 but i know every thing about any animal no lie
A nesting box gives a hen a comfortable and secure place to lay her eggs.
It is not a good idea. If you provide a larger nesting box for the cockatiel and a small one for the budgie, there should be no problem. If the budgie has already claimed the larger nesting box as her own, you will never train her to leave, and will need to buy another large box for the cockatiel.
put cotton or sticks in it, and you can even buy nesting supplies at a pet store.
parakeets love to be protective of there baby's and they also like dark and private spaces since a nesting box is dark and small and private they will love to hatch they baby eggs in a nesting box and so they eggs cant fall and be safe too.
No, It should be low enough for them to hop in and out of at will. In the summer you can remove it at 3 weeks.
No The only time I have seen a rooster in a nesting box was when it was sick or injured. The nesting boxes are used for "nesting". Laying eggs or when brooding. The roosters do not do this. If you have a rooster doing this there is something wrong. He is either being harassed by another rooster in the flock or he is hurt or sick. It is easier to protect themselves from harm when in a "sheltered" place.
This is usually because the hen could not get access to the nesting box when she needed it. Add a new nesting box to the coop and remove some of the bedding from the box she usually uses to the new one.
This is typical pre-nesting behaviour. The budgies, in particular the female, are preparing the nesting box for nesting. Some pairs of budgies never successfully breed, but they still display all the signs and behaviour of wanting to nest.
no