If you want to release your domestic rabbit to the wild, lets say, its called a one way death trip. The rabbit doesn't know how to survive on its own because it usually eats pellets, not grass. The rabbit will die of malnutrition and their teeth will grow so large it will cut the roof of the mouth. Your killing your innocent rabbit in a slow suffering path of death.
If you lost it in the wild, for a few days, it might be okay!
There was a park in Texas with lots of ex-pet rabbits. Suppose the weather and foliage helped them out. However, domestic rabbits are pretty tender animals and don't have the skills they need to protect them from predators. I once returned a rabbit to the pet store--she was unsafe to have around since she was a seriously mad rabbit.
Chances are, the wild rabbit will be frightened, and may bite you. It is generally not a good idea to touch wild animals.
Wild
Not only for wild rabbits, almost all types of animals that live in the wild have flea! I think you meant flea, instead of fea. But yeah wild rabbits have fleas.
Leave them alone. Mother rabbits will leave their babies while they go find food. Don't pick them up or touch them.
Not all rabbits are wild because thay can be pets. hjsonsnoma
wild rabbits are thinner and more quicker and more numerus
yes, because volcanoe rabbits are
Yes, wild cats do hunt rabbits. On many occasions, a cat will hunt the baby rabbits for food.
You can't buy wild rabbits for sale, only pet rabbits. Wild rabbits, like all wild animals, should be left alone and not domesticated, or caught and sold. It's one thing to hunt wild rabbits, and then sell their body or products (meat, fur), but you shouldn't catch and sell wild rabbits as live animals: there are enough pet rabbits to go around (in fact, in many places, there are too many -- overpopulation).
Yes, rabbits and hares can live wild in the UK. I've seen them!
No. There is not wild rabbits in the Dominican Republic. You can find them just in farms.
wild european rabbits
Wild rabbits live in burrows.