As the hawk swoops down, its keen eyes lock onto the rabbit darting across the open field. The rabbit's heart races as it zigzags to evade the predator, relying on its agility and speed. With each desperate leap, it seeks refuge in a nearby thicket, hoping to outsmart the relentless hunter above. The tension hangs in the air, a dramatic interplay of survival in the wild.
yes. keep em away from hawks, and if a hawk swoops on your rabbit wack the hawk with a broomstick, if it keeps coming wack it HARD twilight maniac
The answer is no. A hawk would probably eat a snow rabbit.
It can see a rabbit sized animal 1 mile away without trouble
rabbi Hawk rahawk
5 would be passed on to the hawk.
Secondary consumer
White... Because white is match with snowy's color, right? There. Plus... Sometimes hawk can smell scent that rabbit's... but at hawk's view while hawk flying, hawk will can't see rabbit with white fur on snowy field.
fox hawk rabbit frog snake
i think it hides and then jumps on it .
no o.O hawks eat rabbits :o
Fox and hawk. No snakes in the tundra.
When a rabbit consumes 500 calories of plants, not all of those calories will be passed on to a hawk that eats the rabbit. Typically, only about 10% of the energy from one trophic level is transferred to the next due to energy loss through metabolism, heat, and waste. Therefore, if a hawk consumes the rabbit, it would receive approximately 50 calories from the original 500 calories consumed by the rabbit.