He knew that the male rabbit (buck) has an insatiable sexual urge. The buck has no reproductive cycle; it is always in heat, ready to mate any time.
The female rabbit (doe) doesn’t have a heat cycle, either. It is always ready to mate all the time, more or less. A doe doesn’t have a menstrual cycle so there’s no special “window” during which pregnancy can occur.
There is no resistance from the doe. If you don’t separate the buck and doe after the first mating, the buck will attempt a second one, a third one, and so on.
Remember the Energizer bunny commercial? Rabbits keep going and going and going.
Even if the doe is already pregnant, the buck doesn’t care; it will continue to mate with her. Even if the doe has just given birth, the buck will attempt to mate with her again and again, Thus, they need to be separated. Otherwise, one—or both of them—could die from sheer exhaustion due to nonstop mating.
Johnny Filart, a friend and a renowned pet breeder, confirms this. He had a traumatic first-time experience with his imported and expensive male Holland Lop rabbit that he left with a female. After an hour, the male was dead.
Rabbits mate because they have the urge. There’s no love. They don’t think. They don’t have the capacity to discern. They just do it.
During the inflight interview with journalists aboard the Philippine Airlines flight from Manila to Rome on Jan. 19, Pope Francis didn’t exactly say, “Catholics shouldn’t breed like rabbits.” Responding to a question from Christoph Schmidt, the Holy Father answered, “God gives you means to be responsible. Some think that—excuse the language—that in order to be good Catholics, we have to be like rabbits. No.”
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opinion.inquirer.net/82006/about-rabbits-francis-knows-nonstop-mating-kills#ixzz3Q03AhKB6
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