They are small, flexible, and fast-moving. Their size helps them stay underground and in small bushes or other spaces as such. They are very flexible, which helps them run, avoid enemies, and hide. They also have very large feet that let them hop long distances and run.
Please see the related question below: it's about wild rabbits.
Rabbits have many adaptations including their powerful hind legs and big ears. They have very keen hearing skills. Rabbits also have different fur colors that usually match that of their environment.
i think the ability to use there camouflage and sense of smell and hearing ,and there ability to run fast or hop to get away for there predator.
the fact that there fur turns white in winter and the regular color in the spring and summer
Adaptations of the jackrabbit include
Long ears- Helps to pick up sounds of predators. Filled with blood vessels which funnel out heat.
Long hind legs- Enable the rabbits to jump great heights and have an incredible speed. They also thump the legs hard on the ground to alert others of danger.
Fur (usually brown or tan)- Helps to camouflage the rabbit in tall grass making it harder for predators to spot it.
Whiskers- Help it navigate its way through dark tunnels it has dug underground.
Teeth- Four long incisors in the front of the mouth to bite through vegetation. And molars (hidden in the back of the mouth) chew up food.
Wild rabbits can live in many different habitats and are mostly found in North America. They eat many types of grass, and donâ??t look much different than rabbits kept as pets.
Rabbits have a high reproductive rate. Short gestation and high fertility aids rapid population increases when food is available.
big ears, camouflage, and hop very fast
Grassland animals have a multitude of adaptations such as they have great speed to run from predators, or that they have a keen sense of smell and/or sight. Also they have antlers or horns to fight off predators or competition, common animals who have this adaptation are as elk or bison. They also live in dry windy conditions.
Their habitat is grassland
the lion is adapted to grassland because its fur is brownish-golden, the color of the grass.
No, cottontail rabbits do not live in the desert. The desert does not support the lifestyle of the cottontail rabbit.
no, no rabbits do
FUPA!
Actually, if you really think, there are a lot of bunnies and rabbits/jack rabbits that are grassland/tundra animals!
hawk
bull snake
in holes
rabbits chipmunks and groundhogs
Carrots no dhu
Adaptations are achieved through evolution.
because they have a brown and grey coat to blend into the rocks and grassland
Deers, rabbits, and squirrels live in grass lands.
deciduous and Prairie(grassland/s)
The cottontail rabbit lives in the savanna or grassland.