There has never been a native Australian wild rabbit. Rabbits are completely introduced to the continent.
On the Australian mainland, Tammar Wallabies have been officially listed as extinct in the wild since the 1920s.
Dingos are a type of wild dog that is in danger of becoming extinct as a pure breed they are Australian Native Dog.
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The Eurasian Crane is not extinct. There are around 300,000 of them in the wild. Their population is declining, but not worrying yet.
Carolina parakeets were declared extinct in 1939, but the last captive bird died in 1918 and the last wild bird was killed in 1904.
They are not extinct...
It's not extinct. The frog usually referred to as the golden poison frog is Phyllobates terribilis, which has stable populations both in the wild and in captivity.
it would be very hard but not impossible. it depends on the amount of time the rabbit was out of the wild A baby wild rabbit taken into your home would not survive if re-released, but a wounded wild rabbit re-habilitated MAYT be all right.
There is no species called the "rabbit bandicoot". "Rabbit-eared bandicoot" is an alternative name for the Bilby. Figures are uncertain, but some sources estimated that there are only 600-700 wild bilbies left.
White tigers are Bengals, not Siberians, and none have been seen in the wild for years.
Barbary Lions are not extinct, they have a small pride of them at Longleat wildlife park, in the UK.
Unless you raised a wild rabbit, then your rabbit is not a jackrabbit. Jackrabbits are not domesticated: they're wild hares. All domestic rabbits are of the European Rabbit species.