Feeding Your Pet Rabbit

Jul 28, 2010

Rabbits currently have a well deserved reputation for being excellent domestic pets. They’re friendly, inquisitive, more than happy to relax and play along with their owners and will happily be petted and held. With the appropriate diet plan, good care and handling you and the bunny should have a lengthy and wonderful lifetime with each other. This is often for as many as 12 years or even more.

There are many important things you might want to learn about your pet’s diet so that you can enjoy the experience of being a rabbit owner.

What’s normally not necessarily recognized is that rabbits need to have high amounts of a mix of two kinds of fibre in their digestive system, classed as digestible and indigestible fibre. You’ll need to ensure you supply the required ratios of the two kinds of fibre so that the rabbit receives the uppermost level of nutritional benefits.

Indigestible fibre is transferred throughout the digestive system and passed as separate, rounded, hard waste. This acts to help keep the digestive system moving and encourages appetite. The digestible fibre is moved upward into the body organ referred to as the caecum. The beneficial bacterias in this organ ferment the fibre which then emerge as sticky waste. The bunny then re-eats these kinds of droppings and their internal system extracts the necessary vitamins from them as the fibre passes through them for a second time.

If you do not give the needed proportion of fibre the bunny can quickly get unwell, or even die. This is why muesli style foods are a really major problem. Rabbits may become faddy eaters and definately will consume sugary foods as a good way to get a glucose hit. Consequently, they pick out all the harmful elements within the muesli ignoring the remainder.  This is known as selective eating and can undoubtedly lead to an imbalanced diet regime, with a lack of calcium mineral, phosphorous and Vitamin D. Most importantly this kind of behavior can lead to a lack of fibre with life-threatening implications.

These types of complications are usually eliminated by sticking to a fibre rich food plan and you may purchase specialist rabbit food intended to meet your bunnies dietary requirements. Moreover, you can also give your bunny an occasional treat. Bear in mind that not all vegatables and fruits are actually beneficial for your bunny. Apples, bananas, grapes and turnips can be fine in moderation, however avoid feeding potato, rhubarb and avocado.

Posted by DogTrainer | Categories: Pet foods |

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