Rabbits eat vegetation and can weigh up to six pounds.
This species prefers to eat various grasses, fruit, and other vegetation.
This suggests that it would have eaten low-lying, ground vegetation.
They move together in groups (herds) eating grass or other vegetation, and do not store food.
It was, despite its small size, probably quadrupedal and ate low vegetation.
The remaining teeth were large and adapted for eating tough vegetation.
They will, however, sometimes eat vegetation at some times of the year and some insects, too.
After that, a calf then begins eating vegetation and nurses only occasionally.
Its teeth were adapted to eating soft vegetation, such as forest leaves.
Chickens in the wild eat more insects and vegetation than grains.