No. Rabbits belong in Family Leporidae. Squirrels belong in the Family Sciuridae.
Rabbits changing fur color APEX*
Rabbits change their color. In spring, their fur is brown, and in the winter their fur is white.
no but it does with rabbits
no, they do however get sunburned if in the sun.
Rex rabbits have a fur gene mutation. This enables the fur's guard hairs to be the same length as the rest of the fur. The Rex has "velvet soft fur".
The snowshoe hare changes its fur to white in the winter, and back to brown (with a white underbelly in the summer. If it is an outdoor rabbit, it can get sunburn, if it's black, its fur will turn a brown color, it isn't really dangerous, but make sure they have shade, and the color will become normal again after she/he gets their winter coat
Lionhead rabbits have the same kind of fur as other rabbits except around their head and neck they have a "mane." The mane might be made up of the same kind of fur as they have on the rest of their body (just a bit longer), or it might be a woolly kind of fur (softer, lighter, maybe a little crimped). Lionheads have the same kinds of colours on their fur as other rabbits do.
Squirrels are covered in fur, which helps to keep them warm and protect their skin. Their fur can vary in color and thickness depending on the species and habitat of the squirrel. Additionally, squirrels may have a bushy tail that they use for balance and communication.
The wild rabbit agoutti coat is dominant.
Usually matches body color for common ground squirrels and no stripe or distinctive markings like a chipmunk.
Red squirrels are an orangey colour while grey ones are grey ---- Grey and gray are exactly the same word - just spelt differently. Americans spell it with an "a" and other english-speaking countries spell it with an "e".