Rabbits are in the class "mammalia" and the order "lagamorpha." So, they are mammals. Their type of mammal is lagamorph. They are not rodents as some people think. Lagamorphs consist of rabbits, hares, and pikas.
As rabbits have backbones they are vertebrates.
Because a rabbit's diet consist of plants & vegetables.
Because they have a spine and if they did not have a backbone then they would be an invertbrate.
Rabbits are mammals because they have the mammal characteristics, live birth, nurse their young,, have fur/hair, are warm-blooded.
It is a herbivore because they have flat teeth that are perfect for grinding plant material, fruit, and vegetables.
A rabbit (two Bs) has a backbone. That is the definition of a vertebrate, The backbone (spine) is made up of vertebrae. All mammals are vertebrates.
Yes
An animal with a spine
whats your nunber,lol it mean with ''bones''
No. They are mammals in the rodent family along with rats, mice, hamsters, and gerbils.
Vertebrates are animals that have a backbone. A vertebrate has a 'vertebra' - a backbone
A kangaroo has a backbone and is classified as a vertebrate.
Yes
No. A rabbit is endothermic. "Endo" means "internal" and "therm" means "heat." A rabbit regulates its body temperature internally through its metabolism. Ectothermic vertebrates (colloquially known as "cold-blooded" vertebrates) use the external environment to regulate their temperature. For example, a snake (ectothermic) basks in the sun to stay warm and retreats under shade to stay cool. Rabbits and snakes are vertebrates because they have spines. An example of an invertebrate would be a jellyfish.
There are all sorts of animals that are invertebrates. However a rabbit is not one of them. A rabbit is a vertebrate.
A dragonfly is not a vertebrate at all. Dragonflies are insects which are classified as invertebrates.
An animal with a spine
Is a bunny is a invertebrate or a vertebrate
Fish are classified as vertebrates.
Yes, a kangaroo has a backbone and is classified as a vertebrate.
whats your nunber,lol it mean with ''bones''
Yes. Anything with vertebrae will be classified as a vertebrate. There are exceptions where some animals have undergone a secondary loss of vertebrae. However, they are still classified as a vertebrate because they have a skull, and scientists have figured out that skulls were first derived from vertebrae.
No. They are mammals in the rodent family along with rats, mice, hamsters, and gerbils.