In some cases yes but not when your around or if your rabbit displays hostility or sickness.
a rabbit is a good pet but you have to pick up after it every week
Rabbit's eyes are on the sides of their head, so you would need to come from behind. Your chances aren't very good, though. Wild rabbits are quick and very cautious.
No. As fun as it may seem, putting a wild rabbit with a pet rabbit is a poor idea. Either the wild rabbit or the pet rabbit will very likely act aggressively toward the other and attack it, and even possibly kill it. Furthermore wild rabbits have the possibility of bring all sorts of diseases that your pet rabbit might not be able to handle.
A pet is domesticated and are raised to live with humans. However, a wild fox isn't accustomed to living with people and also live by their instincts. Assuming that you are raising a fox, I suppose the difference would be if it could be train or if it could be kept inside. However, if you picked it up from the wilderness, then yeah, it's a wild fox. Correct me if I'm wrong dear.
In the wild, rabbits live in groups of up to ten underground in a burrow. The burrow is part of a chamber of burrows, which is called a warren. There can be up to twenty burrows in a warren. With pet rabbits, it rather depends where you keep them. If the rabbit is outside in a home made from wood then this is called a hutch. However, if you keep the rabbit inside in a smaller house made from plastic/metal this is called a cage.
For wild rabbits, it is anything up to 35mph.
I'm not saying this about all rabbits, but i had a wild rabbit who was my pet for several months and warmed right up to us, but when we got a tame rabbit, he would back him into a corner and box him in the face w/ his paws until he hid in his igloo
If you go to the pet store where you bought it and gave them your name, phone number, etc., they should be able to pull up a record, in it the species. If your pet rabbit was wild and you caught it (which I would not recommend) take it to a vet who should be able to ID it for you. -Hope this helps! The American Rabbit Breeders Assn. (go to BING) has a Standard of Perfection with full color pictures of every accepted breed and also most varieties. (colors)
No, just like a cat or dog brought to the vet, he or she requires a fee for treating the animal. If you found a wild rabbit, or an escaped pet rabbit, there are rescue groups that may take the rabbit for you. But, they need and depend on donations to keep up with the cost of food, shelter and medical treatments.
Call up the SPCA it is someone's pet that has gotten out/
Pet rabbits don't do very well in the wild.A pet rabbit might survive for a little while, but it will be scared and unhealthy for most of that time.An angora rabbit will have an especially hard time. Wild animals don't have long fur because it's too hard to maintain. Long fur can hide parasites easier than long hair, it takes longer to dry and makes it harder for the animal to regulate its body temperature, and it can get into knots that pull from the skin and lead to discomfort, and even infection.There are two reasons why pet rabbits don't do very well in the wild:Wrong HabitatPet rabbits are the European Rabbit species. They come from the Mediterranean region and they can't handle extremes in temperature or weather. The wild rabbits where you live come from where you live: they're probably a different species, and their bodies are made for your weather and landscape. If it gets very cold or very hot, the wild rabbits will be fine but a pet rabbit would suffer and possibly die.Wrong InstinctsRabbits learn how to live when they're young. The adult rabbits around them show them how to find food and shelter, how to get along with other rabbits, and how to escape predators. When pet rabbits are young, they don't learn those things: instead, they learn how to survive in your home (or a shelter or the breeder's home or wherever it is they grew up). Pet rabbits do have some wild instincts but not enough, and they aren't well-honed.
I would contact a veterinarian for that. It depends on the size of your rabbit and his allergies or other conditions that he might have. Consult your local pet doctor to get the answer to that question, or look it up on a reliable pet health website.