If you are talking about were a breed kepts rabbits. It is a rabbitary.
Hutch is answer
The place where rabbit live is called CAGE.
You could call the area the rabbit's habitat, and the actual place would be the burrow or warren.
The shelter for rabbits is called a "Hutch" The place wild rabbits live is called a warren.
A family of rabbits is called a fluffle in Britain and in the Us they are called a herd. a Hutch is the house/cage they live in.
Wild rabbits live in many parts of the world. Typically, rabbits live in thickets, forests, meadows, and woods. Rabbits like locations that have a moderate climate. (This explains why almost half of the rabbit population lives in North America.) Rabbits live in groups called herds in a warren. A warren has underground rooms, called burrows, which are dug by the females. The burrows are linked by narrow tunnels. Within the warren are "rooms" for sleeping and nests to raise baby rabbits in.
Wild rabbits live where there is plant life, easy dirt to dig, and the temperature should be 50 degrees to 80 degrees. The burrows dug where plants or other shady material is hiding it from predators. Wild rabbits can live in the desert, grassland, woodland, taiga, tundra, and deciduous forest. Desert rabbits should have some sort of shade, and grass nearby. Arctic and Antarctic hares need to have a sturdy burrow and some edible plants under the ice and snow. Thanks for reading, BYE!
Yes, most of those rabbits that live in the prairies are jack rabbits. Rabbits live all over the world, well, except the rain forest.
The shelter for rabbits is called a "Hutch" The place wild rabbits live is called a warren.
Wild rabbits live in burrows which are tunnels underground.
A family of rabbits is called a fluffle in Britain and in the Us they are called a herd. a Hutch is the house/cage they live in.
It is called a Conttontail rabbit
Wild rabbits live in burrows underground, while tame rabbits usually live in a wooden structure called a hutch.
Wild rabbits live in many parts of the world. Typically, rabbits live in thickets, forests, meadows, and woods. Rabbits like locations that have a moderate climate. (This explains why almost half of the rabbit population lives in North America.) Rabbits live in groups called herds in a warren. A warren has underground rooms, called burrows, which are dug by the females. The burrows are linked by narrow tunnels. Within the warren are "rooms" for sleeping and nests to raise baby rabbits in.
most rabbits live in woods in North America, jack rabbits live in deserts.
Wild rabbits live in burrows.
Some rabbits live in cold places like New Zealand rabbits, but some live in warm places like dwarf rabbits
Wild rabbits live where there is plant life, easy dirt to dig, and the temperature should be 50 degrees to 80 degrees. The burrows dug where plants or other shady material is hiding it from predators. Wild rabbits can live in the desert, grassland, woodland, taiga, tundra, and deciduous forest. Desert rabbits should have some sort of shade, and grass nearby. Arctic and Antarctic hares need to have a sturdy burrow and some edible plants under the ice and snow. Thanks for reading, BYE!
Yes, rabbits are mammals. They have live babies.
In the wild, rabbits live in underground burrow systems called "warrens." "Warren" is also the name for the rabbit community (the group of rabbits). Domestic rabbits live free-range indoors (house rabbits), or they live in hutches, cages, crates, "condos," exercise pens or "runs," etc. See the related question below for more details.