no
Rabbits eat vegetables, rabbit pellets, and Monty Python's Knights of the Round Table.
Yes safe!
VEGGIES, FRUIT, AND PELLETS. THEY EVEN EAT THERE POOP FOR PROTEIN.
In the wild, they eat plants, at your house, they drink from a bottle and eat pellets and hay.
AnswerRabbit pellets are designed very specifically to meet a rabbit's dietary needs, and since rabbits eat very unique diets, their pellets are not suitable for other animals. Other animals should eat pellets made specifically for them or else they will suffer from malnutrition and fall ill.DebateOne person wrote: Guinea pigs, hamsters, and mice can also eat rabbit pellets. Another person wrote in response: Hamsters and mice are omnivorous, which means they require animal protein in their diet and they can digest animal fats; rabbits, on the other hand, are vegetarian (vegan), and their pellets should be low in protein and fat -- in other words, these animals eat very different diets and therefore can't eat the same pellets. Guinea pigs (cavies) are more similar to rabbits but they have special dietary needs too, and they should eat a pellet made just for them (for instance, they need vitamin C and their pellets will have this added, whereas rabbit pellets don't).
Chinchillas need to be fed a high quality pellet and some of those high quality pellets are indeed rabbit pellets.. such as.. Purina Rabbit show, Nutrina Naturewise and Manna Pro. Just remember not all rabbit foods are safe for chinchillas to eat. Qualty chinchilla pellets are: the kline diet, tradition, mazuri, oxbow and some ranchers have their own formula.
This rabbit will eat the same thing any rabbit eats. Alfalfa pellets and most vegetables and lettuce. Fiberous fruits like apples and pears.
Hay, pellets, water, grass, vegetables, fruits, some kinds of plants.
12-18% rabbit pellets from a feed store, supplemented by fresh greens
If your rabbit hates vegetables, try leafy greens. If she won't eat leafy greens, buy commercial rabbit pellets to feed her.
Timothy hay, & rabbit pellets.