Wednesday, November 2, 2016

Cute Bunnies - Rabbits and highlight facts that you don’t know before

Factoflife - Rabbits or Bunnies are awesome. If you have ever owned a rabbits as a pet, you could know the joy and benefits they bring to your life. Here in this article, we notice you some highlight facts about rabbits, bunnies that you don’t know before.

1. Rabbits or bunnies?
Rabbits and bunnies are the same animal – there’s no difference in breed or species, just the word we prefer.

2. Sleep with opening eyes
Rabbits often sleep with their eyes open to alarm them of enemies.

3. Teeth never stop growing
A rabbit’s teeth never stop growing! Many people believe they need to chew to keep their teeth short. While they do enjoy chewing, it’s the normal wear from where their top and bottom teeth meet that keeps a rabbit’s teeth short.

4. Excellent sense of smell, hearing and vision
Rabbits have nearly 360° panoramic vision, allowing them to detect predators from all directions. They can see everything behind them and only have a small blind-spot in front of their nose.

5. Getting bored easily
Just like humans, rabbits become bored if their environments remain the same, so can benefit from variety and occasional change of scenery. However, too much change can have adverse effects. A wild rabbit’s survival depends on an intimate knowledge of its surroundings in order to escape from predators, so structural changes to the “warren” of a rabbit kept as a pet should be kept subtle, such as changing their toys and regularly providing new ones.

6. Baby hare and rabbit differences
Hares are born with their eyes open, hair covering their bodies, and they can run within a few minutes of birth. Rabbits, on the other hand, are born blind, naked, and remain in a fur-lined nest for the first days of their lives.

7. Four hours of exercise per day
Rabbits need at least four hours of exercise per day to prevent boredom and osteoporosis

8. Unique personality
Every rabbit is different. They can take a long time to get to know their own fact, and it’s hard to tell if they will get along with another animal companion—even another rabbit. Making sure two rabbits get along takes a lot of time and energy. It can be dangerous to put two of them together who don’t know each other yet, so keep that in mind if you plan on adopting more than one rabbit.

Check out amazing tiger facts and giraffe baby

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