WHAT DO I FEED MY RABBIT?
By Zoe Forward, DVM, Dipl. ABVP (canine/feline)
Rabbits are wonderful pets, but they have special diet requirements
that you may not be able to find out at the pet store. In general a rabbit’s
diet should consist of four things:
1)
HAY- Most of
a rabbit’s diet (70-80%) should be a high quality GRASS hay such as Timothy,
available for the rabbit to eat 24 hours a day.
The hay needs to smell fresh and have a green color. Don't feed moldy or dusty hay. Don't feed large quantities of alfalfa hay
because it is too high in calcium for a rabbit.
2)
PELLETS – A lower percentage (10-20%) of the diet
should consist of rabbit pellets that contain a minimum of 18-20% fiber and a
maximum of 14-16% protein. Do not buy
rabbit food that contains seeds, nuts or starch-rich cereal kibble mixed in
(fiesta mixes). You want food that just has green pellets(e.g., Oxbow Bunny
Basic, Kaytee Forti-Diet). Feed
approximately ¼ cup of pellets per 4 pounds of body weight of rabbit per
day. Pellets should be fresh. Do not purchase more than 6 weeks worth of
pellets at a time because it may spoil.
Make sure the expiration date on the rabbit pellet bag is still valid or
the pellets may not have enough vitamin content remaining.
3)
FRESH
FOODS – The rest of the diet should consist of fresh, well washed, dark
green and yellow vegetables such as parsley, kale, carrot tops, etc. (see list
of recommended vegetables below). Feed 1
cup of mixed greens daily. Avoid beans and rhubarb.
4)
WATER – Water is
an extremely important part of your rabbit’s diet. Without a constant clean, fresh source of
water, your rabbit can die. Sipper water
bottles are ideal for rabbits because they do not spill and the
rabbits cannot soil the water.
Feeding this diet rather than an all pellet diet or fiesta mix
diet reduces the likelihood of hairballs, diarrhea, kidney disease and
obesity. Occasional grains, cereals or
breads can be offered, but be aware that these foods in excess are associated
with fatal diarrheas.
Select at
least three kinds of vegetables daily. A variety is necessary in order to
obtain the necessary nutrients, with one each day that contains Vitamin A.
Recommended
vegetable choices:
Alfalfa, radish and clover
sprouts Green peppers
Basil Kale*♠
Beet greens (tops)* Mint
Bok choy Mustard
greens*
Broccoli (mostly leaves/stems)* Parsley*
Brussel sprouts Peppermint
leaves
Carrot and carrot tops* Radicchio
Celery (leaves/stem) Radish
tops
Clover Raspberry
leaves
Collar greens* Romaine
lettuce (No iceberg or
Dandelion greens & flowers
(no pesticides)* light colored leaf lettuce)
Endive Spinach*♠
Escarole Watercress*
Pea pods (the flat edible kind:
snow pea or sugar snap pea)* Wheat grass
Gai long Yu
Choy
Dwarf choy sum
*=
Contains vitamin A. Vitamin A is a dietary necessity. Choose one each day from
the list that
contains Vitamin A.
♠ = Use sparingly. Healthy, but high in either oxalates or
goitrogens and may be toxin in
accumulated quantities
over a period of time.
Recommended
fruit choices:
Apple Pear
Blueberries Pineapple
Melon Plums
Orange Raspberries
Papaya Strawberries
Peach
Food
Supplements? In addition to the above
recommended foods, the addition of one papaya enzyme extract tablet (e.g. Oxbow
Papaya tablet) daily is recommended to help prevent hairballs.
Supplementation
with digestive enzymes (proteases, amylases), acidophilus, or vitamins on a
daily basis is unnecessary, if you feed the recommended diet items. There is no evidence that healthy rabbits
produce insufficient levels of these enzymes or require probiotic supplements
on a regular basis.
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