no never because rabbits and mice are enemies
yes
Same as any animal. From the food they eat.
i have the same question on my homework. It's not the type of Animal Kingdom it's just the Animal Kingdom. Hope this helps!
Amphibians are in the same kingdom as mammals, birds, reptiles, fish, and insects, the Animal Kingdom.
They are the same thing. In the same way that dogs are bow-wows or horses are gee-gees, rabbits are bunnies; i.e. a childlike or sentimental way to describe the animal.
If by Fancy mice you mean Show mice, & common you mean pet/lab/snake food mice, then yes, they do mix. They're all basically the same animal, just different variations.
No. Rabbits and cats are in a different animal groups. Rabbits are rodents (rats, mice, guinea pigs, squirrels, etc.), while cats are felines (tigers, lions, bobcats, leopards, etc.) Animals generally have to be in the same animal group to reproduce and have "combined offspring" together. Wolves and coyotes can have combined offspring naturally, as can wolves and husky dogs. But the animals have to be very similar, and rabbits and cats are actually very different from each other.
The word "feral" means an animal that was once domesticated, and has now become wild or untamed. So, feral rabbits are the same species as domesticated rabbits: they're European Rabbits, or Oryctolagus cuniculus.
The same kingdom the animal the fetus will be when it's born, is the kingdom the fetus itself belongs to. A cat fetus is in the Felidae kingdom, for instance.
Only if the animal is in the same family as the rabbit. (Feline, canine etc.) No.
Pelicans are classified as birds, therefore their place in the animal kingdom is Class Aves, or else, Avialae within Theropoda (the same group that includes carnivorous dinosaurs!).
Amphibians are part of the kingdom Animal. Same worms and humans. To narrow it down, they are part of the Phylum Chordate.