Brown, White and Grey!
Yes, hares have fur. Their fur is generally longer and coarser than rabbits, helping them adapt to their habitats and stay warm in cold climates. Hares also molt and change the color of their fur to blend in with their surroundings during different seasons.
covered in fur and with their eyes open
white fur to camoflage in the snow
mainly through their fur
Yes, their fur is white which blends in with the snow.
Hares have brown fur as a form of camouflage, helping them blend into their natural habitat and avoid predators. This coloration provides them with better protection and increases their chances of survival in the wild.
White is the answer! Snow is White! Everything is white in winter!
The fur changes to white at the approach of winter.
No but, there are lemmings they are like mice but with shorter tails and they can have brown and black fur or white fur.
snowshoe hares adaptions is their white fur helps them blend into its surrondings
some rabbits are born without hair at first then when the rabbit gets older it might get hair or not All baby rabbits are born naked (without fur). Baby hares are born with fur. This is one difference between rabbits and hares. Unless the rabbit sick, or a mutant (seriously: I mean mutated genes), then it will grow fur. All normal baby rabbits grow fur eventually.
Considering the properties of colors, a dark furred rabbit would do better in the snow because black for example attracts more heat than say white. In the wild however, hares have white coats to blend in with the white snow.