Hares and jackrabbits.
the animal with small ears but is large is a hourse with its small ears and long tail
A bunny
Mice with large ears are often referred to as "big-eared mice" or "long-eared mice." These characteristics can vary among different species of mice, but generally, large ears are an adaptation that helps them with their sense of hearing and thermoregulation.
Hello! A lot of animals have large ears, but I'd say that the elephant has large ears.
A fossa is an animal that looks like a combination of a cat and a mongoose. They have long bodies, short legs, and muscular builds, with a pointed snout and sharp teeth. Their appearance is suited to their role as agile predators in their natural habitat.
the animal with small ears but is large is a hourse with its small ears and long tail
The feature of an animal is how it looks like. like the dog it has a tail, two ears, ... ETC..... so feature is how the animal looks like
Kangaroo ears are the sensory organs by which kangaroos are able to hear. Kangaroos have an acute sense of hearing. Externally, the main feature of the ears is that they are reasonably long, and able to twitch around independently to determine the direction of specific sounds, much as a cat does.
One animal that looks like a rabbit is a hare. Hares are similar in appearance to rabbits but have longer legs and ears.
chinchla
A grasshopper
he is a puppy with really long ears(he looks more like a bunny though)
A bunny
Dessert Foxes have very large ears that help it locate preay and reduce body heat.
A lop bunny (rabbit)
Mice with large ears are often referred to as "big-eared mice" or "long-eared mice." These characteristics can vary among different species of mice, but generally, large ears are an adaptation that helps them with their sense of hearing and thermoregulation.
The kangaroo does not use its ears to catch anything. To begin with, the ears are not prehensile, and all they can do is rotate to listen carefully for predators. Secondly, very few species of kangaroos are anything but omnivores. No doubt the bettongs and musky rat-kangaroos which are omnivores use their ears to carefully listen for the movement of invertebrates, but that is completely the extent to which any kangaroo will use its ears for catching food.