Rabbit ears are larger than our ears. Rabbit ears can hear 10x better than humans can. Rabbit ears are covered in fur, we have ear hair. Our ears go on the side of our heads and rabbit ears go straight up or lop down if it is a lop rabbit.
Yes ants can get into rabbits ears. In fact my own rabbit has ants all over him. I don't get why but my rabbit does indeed have ants on him and inside his ears. Some ants will even go deep into the ear and start to eat away at the brain. hope it helps
No. A. you were messing with the rabbit. B. rabbits don't own anything.
Cream the rabbit out of Sonic can fly with her ears.
A rabbit would not eat its nest, only rabbit food or food.
Its not a good idea Every rabbit should have it's own cage and a pregnant doe not only needs her own cage and nest box but peace and quiet. Having a non pregnant doe in with her would cause too much confusion. The non pregnant doe could jump in and out of the nest box stomping the babies or cause the doe to stomp her own babies by jumping in and out of the box herself while trying to protect them from the other doe. Does will fight, pulling fur, slitting each others ears and scratching eyes.
A rabbit playpen would have more room for the rabbit to run around. A cage is limited in space. It's important that a rabbit get a couple of hours of exercise each day. If you have a cage, it's good to get one with a rabbit door, so the rabbit can jump in and out on its own. You can then surround the cage with a play pen, if you want.
Communicating in their own ways.
No. My rabbit tryed reproducing with his own daughter!
The mother rabbit may accidentally take a chunk out of a baby's ear during kindling. If you have older babies with chunks out of their ears I would first check the doe for mastitis (swollen mammary glands, she may bite babies if they try to nurse and she has mastitis) If she is OK I would be inclined to think that you have too many babies in too small of a cage and they have started fighting, biting chunks out of each others ears. Time to put in a larger cage, wean from mother rabbit and/or separate into bucks and does and give them their own cages. Lop Eared Rabbits are not more likely to do this than other breeds of rabbits.
No need to compare. Both are unique in themselves with their own individual identity.
No their ears stand up on their own.
Trim rabbit nails no more than you would your own.