This is either a cross breed rabbit (erect ear crossed with lop ear), a lop with too strong of ear cartilage (ear cartilage in these breeds in naturally more weak and breaks at a young age so the ears cannot be held above the head), or an erect eared breed that has damage to the cartilage in one ear.
It might have an infection. mine did and we took it to the vets. we got some treatment and the vet told us that if left, the infection can cause the head to turn as far as 180 degrees. it is very common, 50% of rabbits get ear infections...poor bunnies!
Probably because it is a crossbred rabbit, half lop sort of thing. Lops have their ears pointing down, not sticking up like other rabbits.
OR your ranbbit could have damaged the cartilage in the ear that is hanging down OR it could be a Lop with VERY poor ear carriage. We need to know the breed to give a better answer.
It depends on the breed of your rabbit. If it is a cross between a type of lop rabbit then sometimes the rabbits ears will completely flop or only on will flop.
if your rabbit is a lop and its ears are one up one down it is usually because they are using one ear to listen to things and the other to relax
a hamster
The reason is they're slightly confused {ear down} but also keeping a lookout for predator {ear up}.
A bunny
You can't make a dog's ears floppy if they are supposed to be pointed because their ears, like ours, do contain bones that make the shape of them. True, a dog's ears can't change from points to floppy, but you can change the next generation of dog's ears by breeding the pointed-ear dog with a floppy-ear dog.
Fluffy, Rodger Rabbit, Bugs, Floppy, and my personal favorite, Little Bunny Fou Fou Or how about 'Flash'
Lopunny is a portmanteau of Lop eared Bunny. Lop ears are the type that are big and floppy, just like Lopunny. It's earlier form, Buneary follows the same naming mechanic (insterting "ear" into Bunny)
a hamster
because whichever the ear is, the nerves in that ear have failed.
The reason is they're slightly confused {ear down} but also keeping a lookout for predator {ear up}.
it's a possible only as a theory. My opion is no, if a German Shepperd got bitten on the ear then maybe THAT ear could be floppy but not the other ear. No dog would have floppy ears because it's scared.
yes
If a bunny's ear is flaky then that might be a sign of ear mites. If a bunny has ear mites the ear will often be matted. Go to a local vet that treats rabbits to get the best results.
A bunny
A lop bunny (rabbit)
To tie a shoelace, grab the two shoelace's, cross them, make a bunny ear with one of them and wrap the other one around it, push the one shoelace that you put around the one you made into a bunny ear and push it through the hole and pull both shoelace's and whala!
This depends on the breed.
You can't make a dog's ears floppy if they are supposed to be pointed because their ears, like ours, do contain bones that make the shape of them. True, a dog's ears can't change from points to floppy, but you can change the next generation of dog's ears by breeding the pointed-ear dog with a floppy-ear dog.