Rabbits are social animals: they enjoy company, and they benefit from living with other rabbits.
However, you can't just throw two or more rabbits together and expect them to get along. Rabbits might love or hate each other for individual reasons, just like humans. And if rabbits aren't spayed/neutered, they're very likely to either fight or breed.
Never let rabbits fight: not only can it lead to physical injury (even a small cut can turn into a big abscess, and a bad fight can be fatal), but fighting is emotionally damaging for rabbits (leading to behavioural problems down the road). Think long and hard before letting your rabbits breed: after all, there are many rabbits in shelters waiting to be adopted, and many of those shelters kill their rabbits if they aren't adopted in time, so does the world really need your rabbit to breed?
Before they can live together, rabbits must be "bonded," which means they love each other and can be trusted not to fight. The bonding process can take a long time and require a lot of patience. See the related question below for more details about bonding.
A rabbit doesn't need to live with other rabbits in order to be happy, but a single rabbit does need a lot of attention from it's human companions. Rabbits are social animals and they need social interaction every day.
Jaguars tend to live alone unless they have offspring.
Actually, they live alone, like most cats.
A rabbit's habitat depends on the type of the rabbit. For example, a hare might live in grasslands or mountains like switzerland, or the U.S, including Canada. Other rabbits can live in hot and dry places like the middle east, but not anywhere, you may find them in Saudia Arabia in Tayef, or Abha, even in the U.A.E, Oman, Kuwait. But places next to the sea like Qatar, may not have rabbits as a country animal, instead they can have falcons etc..good for shooting with a 22 or a 222 Rabbits, although they are veriaties of them, they still can live in both places, the hot regions, or the cold regions. by zac rules
You can't buy wild rabbits for sale, only pet rabbits. Wild rabbits, like all wild animals, should be left alone and not domesticated, or caught and sold. It's one thing to hunt wild rabbits, and then sell their body or products (meat, fur), but you shouldn't catch and sell wild rabbits as live animals: there are enough pet rabbits to go around (in fact, in many places, there are too many -- overpopulation).
Rabbit vary in length of age! I myself have too rabbits one is a lop eared and the other one is a lion head rabbit!They can usually live up to 8-12 years as a pet if well looked after.
Yes. Rabbits generally prefer to live in groups but if you give them the care and attention they need the they should be OK living alone.
yes rabbits can live together but then they rely on each other if they live on there own they Will become closer to you
Some rabbits live in cold places like New Zealand rabbits, but some live in warm places like dwarf rabbits
Jaguars tend to live alone unless they have offspring.
pandas like to live alone unless a mother panda has to take care of her baby panda.
deers live with animals like rabbits and other deer and lots of bugs.
they hoard just like any other insect. and they live on your bed, with you and about hundreds/thousands more. so no, they don't live alone.
Rabbits give birth to live young which are then fed on milk like all other mammals. There is no major procedural difference between the pregnancy and birth procedures of rabbits and humans.
In almost all cases, yes. This is because female rabbits are territorial and most male rabbits fight. In rare cases will and un- neutered/spayed rabbit live with another rabbit.
Silver Martin rabbits live for just as long as other pet rabbits. Pet rabbits have an average lifespan of 8 to 10 years, although many live to 11 or 12, and some even live to 13 and 14.
a lone wolf like a wolf lives alone like an ant but may diverse with other ants if it wants to mate
Actually, they live alone, like most cats.