They will not kill each other ..... probably..... although female rabbits have been known to castrate male rabbits and then......they bleed to death. AND rabbits have been known to kill each other and cats with one mighty kick. More than likely your biggest problem will be your brother and sister breeding. If this happens you will either have the best results or the worst. The worst will be birth defects like no eyes or extra ears plus internal defects that you can't see. Save yourself the grief and get another cage.
No! The babies will be semi-wild, but still sweet! Wild rabbits do it! Don't kill the rabbit!
Take out everything, from the hutch and fumigate everything! Dont kill the miceez they are tooo cute to be dead! ::(
you can,but the rabbit will kick its back legs and ,possably, kill the guineapigs.
Probably not. The mature adult will be aggressive and probably kill the kit.
A fox can kill a rabbit by using its speed, agility, and sharp teeth to catch and overpower the rabbit. Foxes are natural predators and hunt small animals such as rabbits for food. They may ambush the rabbit, chase it down, or use their stealth to catch it off guard.
I am not sure if you have worded your question correctly but I will try to answer anyway. Becarful of putting rabbits together that have not been raised together. The female put with a male rabbit will most likely get pregnant yes, however, have a hutch that can separate the male and female once the babies are born or the male will eat the male bunnies. If there is more than one female in the hutch when you put in the male the females may try and kill the male so it is best to pick one female and put with male separately from the other females. Hope that was helpful.
no, but the male rabbit will impregnate the female baby offspring when they mature. so young rabbits will not kill the baby rabbit.
a rat can kill a rabbit a rat can kill a rabbit
yes you do or the male will kill the babys
You can only kill a rabbit using your penis if you try to have sex with it.
kill it
One Opinion: Yes! If you plan on introducing a new rabbit to your female, please respect the principles of bonding (i.e. putting their cages near, then letting one bunny at a time out to scent the other one, etc.; there are many websites that describes the process in length). If you do not do so, they can attack each other and seriously hurt or maim each other. The sex of your rabbit has no importance in this matter.Another Opinion: I am a rabbit breeder and have found there are zero issues but only IF the female is placed in the males cage for mating females are very territorial of there space.