it all depends on what colour the dam(mother) sire(father) are and what they carry i myself have kits(babies) in the nest. dam is blue eyed white, sire is himilayan kits however are Vienna marked blue, Vienna marked black and B.E.W or himi. the blue n black are from her side as this is what she carries.
Most Rabbits have brown eyes. Albino rabbits have red eyes and there are even some rabbits with blue eyes.
Lilac-coloured rabbits are domesticated, and all domestic rabbits are of the species European Rabbit, and their scientific name is Oryctolagus cuniculus.
yes guinea pigs can have different coloured ears
Rabbits and humans are different because rabbits hop and humans walk.
Rabbits come in all different different shapes colors and varieties their is not only one color for rabbits
You see different coloured objects by light. the light hits the object and reflects into your eyes.
small, fat, big, skinny!! coloured ones, non-coloured....
well you cant purposely get a different coloured seed you have just keep planting and they will come up!
Yes, rabbits can eat romaine lettuce, but only the dark-coloured parts (tear off the white/light-coloured bits and avoid entirely the heart or baby leaves). Too much romaine can lead to illness, so romaine can be included in the rabbit's "salad" but rabbits shouldn't eat lettuce every day. See the related question below for more details about the rabbit diet.
Different species of rabbit have different scientific names, and there are many different species of white rabbits. All domesticated rabbits (including white rabbits) are European Rabbits, and their scientific name is Oryctolagus cuniculas.
yes.
Rabbits can eat dark-coloured lettuces (like romaine, green leaf, red leaf, mesclun mix). These sorts of lettuces can be incorporated into the rabbit's daily "salad": too much lettuce, though, can lead to illness (like diarrhea). However, rabbits can't eat white-coloured lettuces (like iceberg, romaine hearts) -- these have little nutritional value for rabbits, and they can lead to illness (like diarrhea). See the related question below for more info about the rabbit diet.