Well, honey, rabbits are more common than foxes because they breed like there's no tomorrow. Those fluffy bunnies have litters of babies faster than you can say "carrot." Foxes, on the other hand, are a bit pickier with their mates and have smaller litters. So, it's just a numbers game, really.
Because in a simple food web there is no room for adapton and change like there is for a complex food chain. For example, lets say the world was only rabbits and foxes. now the foxes eat all the rabbits and the rabbits become exctinct. So sow with the foxes only source of food gone, they'll starve to death, which in turn, causes the world to turn into an empty wasteland. But with a complex food chain, was as is, the foxes would have mere to prey on which would save the rabbits and the foxes. I hope i helped...
Yes in the world has too much rabbits more than 100
you`d expect more caterpillars than foxes because caterpillars are pregnant less and give birth earlier than foxes
Hawks, owls, coyotes, foxes, bears, racoons, snakes, and about any other predator larger than itself. It depends where you live, which animals eat rabbits.
no usually the male rabbits are bigger than female , because male rabbits are more dominate.
No, foxes won't attack anything bigger than they are, unless you corner it.
Both foxes and snakes are vertebrates while sea stars belong to a group of invertebrates called echinoderms. This means that foxes and snakes share a common ancestor (probably something resembling a lizard) which they do not share with sea stars.
I don't know what breed it actually is, but the wild rabbits I've seen look identical to my Mini Lop-Eared rabbit, Snuggles. I have read that they are called the 'Common rabbit' but there's probably more than one Common rabbit in the world, but I know for sure they are not English rabbits (English rabbits are speckled , like a Skewbald horse). Wild rabbits are normally a tawny-brown colour with a distinctive silky golden-brown neck. But I don't know any more than that.
Only one way, F O X
Fennec Foxes are eaten by the African Eagle Owl and any other mammal that is bigger than it.
Foxes are not some kind of "mixture" of dogs and cats, they're foxes. They're in the Canidae family, though, so they're more closely related to dogs than they are to cats.
No they dont.