It's a taxidermist created fictional animal. that's what it is! In some outdoor sports stores you may find a stuffed rabbit with antelope horns or deer antlers added. THey call it a jackalope. It's also a fictional animal.
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
No. Well, a bored taxidermist might have built one for the fun of it, but not in nature.
A deer will eat killed animals, including rabbits. They mostly eat the intestines which are full of half-digested plant material. Plant material is their normal food.
the Japanese word for cat is Neko, so I think it would be called a “Usagi” because the Japanese word for rabbit is that.
The animal which is 1/2 albino and 1/2 regular deer is an all deer with complete coloring of a deer but the front half also received gene for albinoism (therefore its color pattern is "normal" in back half and the normal color of deer on the front half is "covered up" by the presence of the albinoism mutation. Partial mutations are rare.
a dig.
A half lion half deer hybrid is commonly referred to as a "leoline," combining "leo" from lion and "line" from deer. This is a mythical creature that combines characteristics of both animals.
There is. In a Romanian folktale. There is an evil character that is half man, and the lower half (of course) rabbit.
There are usually around 750 deer in Richmond Park - half Red deer and half Fallow deer. Autumn is the most exciting time to see them as it's the rutting season.
No, they are their own species.
The giant house rabbit is about one foot and a half......
A half New Zealand White or A crossbred or 'pet' rabbit