Subject:

Bunny Rating: ★★★★☆ (4.5/5)

Historically, the term "bunny" was not always for rabbits; in the 16th century, it was actually a nickname for a

C. Domestic and Economic Value

Rabbits are domesticated widely for meat, fur, and as laboratory animals. However, their popularity as household pets has surged. As of recent data, rabbits are the third most popular mammalian pet in many Western nations, behind dogs and cats.

Interesting facts

2. The Powerful Hind Legs

Bunnies are naturally clean.

Here is a secret: Most spayed/neutered bunnies can be litter trained just like a cat. Place a low-sided box with paper-based litter (never clay or clumping cat litter) in a corner of their pen. They will instinctively use it while eating hay.

Purring:

When a bunny is content, it will lightly click its teeth together. This "tooth purr" sounds very similar to a cat’s purr.

Conservation

In the hierarchy of the animal kingdom, the bunny (or rabbit) is often relegated to the role of the perpetual victim. As a "prey species," its life is defined by the constant threat of predators—hawks from above, foxes from the brush, and snakes from below. Yet, to view the bunny as merely a fragile target is to miss the extraordinary biological and social sophistication that allows it to thrive in nearly every environment on Earth. The bunny is not just a soft creature of the meadow; it is a master of situational awareness, survival, and unexpected intelligence. Biological Vigilance