Yes, wild rabbits usually give birth in shallow burrows called forms. These forms are often located underground or hidden in vegetation to provide protection and warmth for the babies, called kits.
What rabbits do is try to prevent wild animals from finding their babies. Rabbits hide their babies in nests underground, and they only visit them twice a day so they don't attract attention. If a wild animal finds the nest, though, they generally don't do anything about it. Rabbits can fight - they have sharp teeth and claws, and powerful back legs that can gut another animal - but this is normally to fight with other rabbits, or to defend themselves.
Yes they do, as their wild cousins would, when not in a cage this is.
what time does rabbits go to bed
Yes there are some wild rabbits in California. I find them all the time at night in Bakersfield.
No! The babies will be semi-wild, but still sweet! Wild rabbits do it! Don't kill the rabbit!
They forage for vegetation and they build underground burrows. Wild rabbits also frolic in the fields, playing and socializing, grooming one another, taking care of their babies, running and hiding from predators, fighting potential sexual competitors (other rabbits), and mating.
1-2 babies are born at a time, once a year
Leave them alone. Mother rabbits will leave their babies while they go find food. Don't pick them up or touch them.
In the wild when rabbits are living in warrens the male rabbits stay with the warren but the females with babies are in a separate part of the warren than the other bunnies. Males are very territorial and will run other male rabbits off.
Wild
Rabbits can mate at any time of the year. There is no specific set time, although it is more common to see young rabbits in the spring and summer months. In July. Other times rabbits mate are August, September, October, November, December, January, February, March, April, May and June. Rabbits give birth one month after mating and are ready to get pregnant almost instantly after birth.