The does are probably fighting over territory. Rabbits (fixed or not) can be very territorial animals and biting fur is a way of showing dominance. I would recommend separating the does and keeping them as far away from each other as possible.
to fight over the female
No seperate them most likely they will kill each other or each others babies.
Yes they do, normally they bite because of a reason. If they're new, they might bite you everytime you cuddle them or feed them because they dont know you too well. I also have two rabbits of my own who bite me quite alot.
Two is the best to keep but they have to be the same gender. It is best to keep two rabbits so they can clean each other and they can play with each other and so they can stay together when there is danger. It is best to have two rabbits from the same family.
The rabbits in the new habitat will have a higher risk of random genetic mutations than the rabbits in the original habitat.
3 apples
Rabbits can protect themselves by scurrying back to their borrows quickly before they get caught by the predator or to bite the animal if it is smaller than them. Usually, rabbits don't bite animals even as a defence strategy because their teeth are long rather than sharp. Some rabbits, depending on the environment, can camouflage which helps them appear 'invisible' to the predator and seem to have disappeared.
As long as the two of you love each others, never hide anything from each others, always talking, treating each others special, the two of you will have a happy and wonderful relationship
48 ounces
two upper lip piercings. (one on each side of the lip.)
It the depends on the actual bite itself. Some suffer from it for a week or two, others may only experience the irration for a day or two. Scratching would only make it worse.
Fibonacci is a famous mathematician who lived around the turn of the 13th century. He is known for a sequence where each number is the sum of the two preceding it. He presented it as the total number of rabbits in a population after so many time periods, assuming that each pair of rabbits had a set number of birthings then died.