Yes, if a lop rabbit mates with a dwarf rabbit, their offspring may inherit characteristics from both parents, such as lop ears from the lop parent and small size from the dwarf parent. It is possible for the bunnies to have lop ears, but it is not guaranteed as it depends on the specific genetic traits passed down.
Yes, lop ears affect a rabbit's ears compared to a radar-eared rabbit. Lop-eared rabbits are prone to deafness and hard of hearing due to the muffling of sound waves through their ears. Imagine covering your ears and hearing the world through them. Radar-eared rabbits can easily swivel their ears to capture the most sound without obstruction.
Yes
Lop earred rabbits can have as few as one bunny to as many as 10. A normal size litter is 4 to 6 bunnies.
35-70 dollars
Holland lop Engilish lop Mini lop Lop
first answer: No, there is no difference between a bunny and a rabbit. The word "bunny" is just a nickname for rabbits -- it derives from the old-time word for "rabbit," which was "coney" (pronounced with a soft "o," like "honey"). The word "rabbit" actually used to mean baby coneys -- nowadays, "rabbit" refers to the animal in general, "bunny" is a nickname, and babies are called "kits" (or "kittens"). second answer: I think they do have a difference between them because the bunny has their ears bend down forward and the rabbit ears stays up response: You are thinking of lop-eared rabbits. Bunnies with ears that bend down are called lops or lop-eared. Bunnies with ears that stay up don't have a special name.
No, it's just the same. In fact, it might be harder for them to get an ear infection because their ears are always down so the fleas or mites or anything else can get in them.
it depends why?
Any carnivore that eats bunnies.
from where they were first created. some guy tried to get a bunny breed from mating a french lop rabbit and a dwarf rabbit and accidentally made a Holland lop.
A lop-eared rabbit is when the ears droop down instead of sticking up.