A visit to the vet would be best but if you can't get a kitten bottle and replacement milk from the store. Just about any big store will carry them. Also keep it warm and feed it about every two hours.
2006-06-28 02:41:50
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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I don't recognize the type of rabbit you're referencing, but if it's a wild rabbit, PUT IT BACK OUTSIDE!!! The nest will appear like a small, fur- or grass-covered depression in the yard, usually under a bush, but not always.
If you found a baby rabbit (eyes closed, ears flat, cottontails have a white stripe on their head) outside, put it in exactly the same spot you found it. Use your head, though, if there are predators (cats, dogs) about. Wait 'til they're gone. Mother rabbits attend their babies just a few times a day, notably dawn & dusk. Rest assured (unless you see a body in the roadside out front) that Mom knows where the baby is & is in control of the situation. If the little rabbit has eyes open, ears up & you spotted it grazing, but it simply appears too small to be out on its own, put it back outside & enjoy the show. Baby rabbits leave the nest pretty early for mammals.
The care & feeding of wild buns is VERY specialized & is illegal for those without a license. That said, if the baby is in obvious distress, is injured, or you pulled it out of your dog's mouth, you need to get it some care.
Call your local 24 hour Animal Emergency Hospital (in smaller communities it may only be open off hours - check your phone book), most of them have vet techs on staff who rehab. If all else fails, call around to local vets for guidance.
But you've probably stumbled (literally!) onto a napping baby who's really just fine & Mom is nearby. Isn't it cute?
2006-06-28 02:52:40
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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They often are not abandoned. You can get details by going on a wild animal rescue website and/or calling a licensed D.E.P. rehabilitator. Best to do this before attempting to do much of anything with him. If you've already removed him from where you found him, put him in a container, maybe a box with holes, line it with grass from where you found him if possible. Put him in the quietest place you can find in darkness. DO NOT show him to people because he is so cute and do not handle him overly much or you further jeopardise his health.
It is difficult for we overly civilized animals to understand the stress this little creature so low on the food chain feels during any interaction with we giants. Nor do we want him to become comfortable with this because he will have to return to the wild one day and he will surely be killed if he comes to trust creatures that bunnies normally wouldn't. Bear in mind that it is against the law to keep a wild animal as a pet or even to attempt to "rehabilitate" him yourself.
While you're waiting for the licensed rehabilitator DO NOT turn the bunny on his back and attempt to feed him from a bottle. The fluid will enter his lungs and he will drown. He probably isn't nursing anymore anyway.
You are obviously tenderhearted. Best of luck!
2006-06-28 02:48:51
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Are you sure it's abandoned? With wild babies, you usually won't see the mother, but that doesn't mean she isn't around. If you're not absolutely sure (saw the mother's dead body), then leave the baby alone. If you're sure it's abandoned, then you need to call your local wildlife rehabilitator. These are people trained to care for wild animals and then release them back to the wild when they are ready. Look up your state name and "wildlife rehab" or call a vet or the humane society, they should have a contact.
2006-06-28 02:46:39
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answer #4
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answered by SLWrites 5
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baby wild rabbits are the hardest things to take care of. They will go into shock at the slightest strange noise. The best thing to do is to take it back to where you found it and release it, the mother usually is around and will take it back in, and move it and her whole nest to a new location. If you don't remember where you found it, then find someone with baby bunnies who have just been split from their mamas and put it in with them, it should adjust better.
2006-06-28 03:43:58
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answer #5
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answered by santana84_02 4
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This is the advice the House Rabbit Society Gives:
"How Do I Know If the Baby Bunnies Need Help?
Very young wild baby bunnies with eyes closed and ears back rarely survive in captivity, even given the most expert human care; and so it is very important to determine whether they really need help. Try to assess whether the infants seem warm and healthy or cold, thin, and dehydrated. One test for dehydration is to gently pinch the loose skin at the back of the neck. If it stays in a "tent," or does not spring back in one second, the bunny is SEVERELY dehydrated and needs rehabilitation IMMEDIATELY by a professional rabbit vet or rehabber. Another test is to stroke the genital area to stimulate elimination. If the pee is brown and gritty, the mother rabbit has not been there to help the bunnies urinate. The brown, gritty urine is toxic, and the infant bunny must be cared for by a professional. Please contact a Wildlife Rehabilitator or rabbit vet immediately.
Older baby bunnies who are found outside of the nest may not be orphaned or in need of assistance. Baby cottontails are born without fur but develop a full coat in a week. Their eyes open in 10 days, and in three to four weeks they are weaned. At this age, they may explore the world outside of the nest but return there to sleep. They are not ignored by the mother but stay with the family group until four or five weeks of age. To determine whether a bunny of this age needs assistance, perform the dehydration test. Also look for bleeding, convulsing, fly larvae, broken limbs; if any, get to a rabbit vet or emergency vet immediately. If he is just out and about, leave him be. He is discovering his world, waiting for mom to return at night when we humans are asleep."
"The Bunny is Wild and Really Orphaned - How do I care for it?
Again, make sure you KNOW for sure the mom was killed and the bunnies are abandoned (not warm, etc). You will not see the mom. The mom will only come back in the middle of the night to feed her babies. If the mom was killed, the best thing you can do for a wild orphaned baby bunny is to get in touch with a skilled rehabilitator. In the meantime, call your local humane society or animal control and one of these vets for a wildlife referral: http://www.rabbit.org/care/vets.html
http://www.morfz.com/PB_vets.html
A great directory of local rehabilitators can be found at: http://www.tc.umn.edu/~devo0028/contact.htm "
Go visit their website for me help if you need it:http://www.rabbit.org/faq/sections/orphan.html
2006-06-28 03:25:50
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answer #6
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answered by loloshorty9 2
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rabbits most often should not have rabies. Most wild animals have a hazard of getting rabies however the probabilities of which can be beautiful narrow. You have got to be bitten through an animal with rabies in an effort to get it. The rabbit would have fleas or mites, that's what I might fear approximately. I might take the rabbit again external or touch a flora and fauna rehabilitator , I might no longer try to rehab it to your possess. rabbits are elaborate to rehab.
2016-08-31 09:28:31
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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The thing is... DON'T TAKE CARE OF IT!!!!!
it is the Rabbit's nature to leave their young during the day so predators don't attack them. the mother rabbit will come at night to feed their young.
This is why people assume that these baby rabbits are abandoned. I just had a litter of baby rabbits and i observed this with the mother.
2006-06-28 02:44:07
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answer #8
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answered by hi, im scott 2
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First, take it to the vet. For vaccinations and rabbies. You can never be too sure how safe they are. If you would like to keep it, try to socialize it, but if you aren't that interested in keeping it, give it to a local shelter or pet shop.
2006-06-28 06:23:39
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answer #9
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answered by Shelby M 1
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take it to the vet or give it to human society
2006-06-28 02:43:31
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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