I actually had to take care of a litter of abandoned baby rabbits before! We kept them in the house in a big cardboard box ( just in case they tried to jump around, didn't want them getting out!) since there was no need for them to stay outside. We used paper towels to hold them just in case there mother came back. At some stores they sell kitten milk and little bottles. That actually worked quite well and just slowly weened them off of the kitten milk to grass.
They can. Sometimes if they don't want to care for them or if the mother senses there is something wrong with one of them.
The newborn rabbit will stay pink for a while then it will grow mold on it and the mold could be ANY color. Sorry about the dead rabbit :(
Newborn rabbits get hydration and nutrition from their mother's milk. If the kit (baby rabbit) isn't drinking, it will require medical intervention or else it probably won't survive. Call your rabbit-savvy vet and ask for advice.
Yes
like 10 inches
A neonatologist is a specialist in the care of the newborn.
A newborn Netherland rabbit can weigh anything thing from 2kg-7kg depending on whether it has already had babies and how much its fed................... top tip Don't feed your rabbit lettuce as this can be fatal
give him water
leave it alone
its usually about a week and a half
No. But a rabbit will kill any male rabbit that comes around, or at least castrate it. That pretty much insures that the babies are his.
Rabbits are social creatures that thrive on the care and attention of his or her owner. Each rabbit has an individual personality that can vary from calm and relaxed to shy and jittery. The average life span of a rabbit is 10 years. You should not get a rabbit unless you are fully committed to giving him or her the proper care they need.If you decide to get a rabbit, please consider adopting one from a shelter. There is a rabbit overpopulation problem in the United States and buying from pet stores and breeders only contributes to the problem. Please research rabbit care via online search engines to better understand proper rabbit care.