depends very much on the illness. some, probably. some may be harmless to us, and dangerous to them, or vice versa. If you're sick, it is best not to chance your bun's health. It is more likely that you get them sick than they get you sick. Their immune systems are also quite weaker than ours, so sicknesses put your bun's life in jeopardy before they even make you miserably sick. The best thing to do is check with your bun's vet to see what she or he thinks about the sickness.
no dogs can't get many human sicknesses
rabbit help human live life. rabbit tasty and delicious for soul.
vectors cause diseases and transmit around their own sicknesses.
It depends if it is a domesticated, vaccinated,Rabbit bit, no, unless the bite gets infected. If the rabbit was a wild rabbit yes you may be affected by rabies and other sicknesses that the rabbit might not be influenced by but you will be. If another rabbit bit your rabbit or so its better to be sure it wont get infected or if the wound doesn't heal your rabbit can be affected by flystrike Hope i could help
It's a rabbit, just younger. Of course it's going to look like a rabbit.
Lagahoo (a.k.a. Lugarhoo): Trinidad and Tobago folklore is rich with supernatural shapeshifters. The Lagahoo is often described as a man by day who turns into various animals (e.g., dog, pig, horse, even a centaur-like being) at night. It drags chains, carries a coffin, and can change its size dramatically—but there's no mention of rabbit traits specifically journals.sta.uwi.edu +3
A rabbit's age is roughly calculated as 15 human years for the first year and 10 human years for the second year. Therefore, a 2-year-old rabbit would be about 25 in rabbit years.
Rabbit.
no it cannot
Rabbit years are similar to dog years. One human year is about 7-8 rabbit years.
Some animals can have sicknesses when anotherone can. So basically, it all depends on the type of species.
yes garlic prevent so many sicknesses