fresh grass is the best diet mixed with dandelion and herbs
NO i have one he eats timothy hay rabbit food and once in a while a peanut or fresh fruit or vegatable (only ceartin produce)
an snowshoe rabbit's diet is plants
Yes.
Because it balances the rabbits diet.
Diet coke
The average weight of a male rabbit is 2-3 pounds. The weight can be more or less and the rabbit be in perfect health because the breed and diet of the male rabbit contribute to the weight.
This rabbit will eat the same thing any rabbit eats. Alfalfa pellets and most vegetables and lettuce. Fiberous fruits like apples and pears.
Rabbits can eat cold apple as a treat only. Too many treats can (and usually will) make a rabbit sick. Pet rabbits should mostly eat a lot of hay, with some fresh greens and pellets daily, and water. Apple and other fruit are not a regular part of a wild rabbit's diet. A bite or two of rabbit every few days will probably not harm a healthy rabbit that eats a balanced, healthy diet. See the related question below for more details about the rabbit diet.
I think diet coke tastes of dirty water.I think I need to go on a diet.The rabbit eats a diet of cereals and fresh vegetables.
Seeds aren't healthy for rabbits. Seeds are not a regular part of a wild rabbit's diet, and they shouldn't be offered to pet rabbits, either. See the related question below for details on a healthy rabbit diet.
No - they're vegetarians. The rabbit's diet consists of flowers, grasses, plants etc. The bee's diet is nectar and pollen.
It dies or is too weak to run away from a predator.
Make sure you do not let your rabbit eat the leaves, stalks, or vines of the tomato plant, they are bad for it (toxic). The fruit of the tomato plant is perfectly edible, so go ahead and offer it as a treat now and then: a bite every few days is fine (assuming your rabbit is otherwise healthy), but tomato shouldn't be a normal part of your rabbit's diet. All breeds of pet rabbit, including dwarf lops, eat the same diet. Please refer to the questions below for more details and helpful links about the rabbit diet.