It depends on the rabbit. The various genera that rabbits fall into are as follows:
Pentalagus
Bunolagus
Nesolagus
Romerolagus
Brachylagus
Sylvilagus
Oryctolagus
Poelagus
There are more than one rabbit genera:
Pet Rabbits and wild European Rabbits are in theOryctolagus genus (species Oryctolagus cuniculus).
Wild rabbits in North America are mostly in theSylvilagus genus (cottontails, marsh rabbits, etc.), but there's also the Pygmy Rabbit in the Brachylagus genus (species Brachylagus idahoensis).
The name for the Genus of a rabbit is Rabiculus.
Oryctologus cuniculus is the common species name for a domestic rabbit.
Rabbits belong to the Animalia kingdom, the chordata phylum, and the vertebrata subphylum. Rabbits also belong to the pentalagus genus.
All rabbits are "Lagomorphs" that means they have big ears, large back feet, and continually growing teeth. They are notrodents!
Latrodectus is the genus of the Black Widow Spider.Latrodectus is the genus of the Black Widow Spider.Latrodectus is the genus of the Black Widow Spider.Latrodectus is the genus of the Black Widow Spider.Latrodectus is the genus of the Black Widow Spider.Latrodectus is the genus of the Black Widow Spider.
Genus, but underline both of them individually
venus rhymes with genus
The taxonomy genus of an Angora rabbit is Oryctolagus.
Do you mean 'Pygmy' rabbit? If so then the scientific name is Brachylagus idahoensis. The genus being "Brachylagus".
Oryctolagus
The genus of Lepus Americanus (the Snow Shoe Hare) is Lepus. Americanus is the species.
Rabbits belong to the Animalia kingdom, the chordata phylum, and the vertebrata subphylum. Rabbits also belong to the pentalagus genus.
No, Sylvilagus transitionalis is not a recognized scientific name for a rabbit species. Sylvilagus is a genus of cottontail rabbits, but transitionalis is not a known species within this genus.
The scientific classification for the Rabbit is as follows: Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Chordata Class: Mammalia Order: Lagomorpha Family: Leporidae There are eight different Genera (plural of Genus) in the rabbit family and each is further categorized into a specific species: Genus 1: Pentalagus Species: Pentalagus Furnessi Genus 2: Bunolagus Species: Bunolagus Monticularis Genus 3: Nesolagus Species: Nesolagus Timminsi Species 2: Nesolagus Netscheri Genus 4: Romerolagus Species: Romerolagus Diazi Genus 5: Brachylagus Species: Brachylagus Idahoensis Genus 6: Sylvilagus Species: Lepus Sylvaticus (contains sixteen sub-species) Genus 7: Oryctolagus Species: Oryctolagus Cuniculus Genus 8: Poelagus Species: Poelagus Marjorita
There 8 genus of rabit the Family: Leporidae. Which you asked
The appearance most cottontail rabbits closely resemble the wild European Rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus). Most members of the genus have a stub tail with a white underside that shows when they are retreating, giving them their name "cottontails." However, this feature is not present in all cottontails (for example, the underside of the Brush Rabbit's tail is grey), nor is it unique to the genus (for example, the European Rabbit also has a white scut).
Animalia, Chordata, Vertebrata, Mammalia, lagomorpha, leporidae, (Genus, Species)
Fact:They cannot have babies together because, even though a domestic rabbit can breed with a wild European rabbit, Cottontails are a different species altogether.(Please see the related question for more info.)
Besides the common hippopotamus (Hippopotamus amphibius), the only other animal in the same family is the pygmy hippopotamus (Choeropsis liberiensis or Hexaprotodon liberiensis). The common hippo is the only species in the genus Hippopotamus.