Rabbits tend to be active during the evening and night, but in areas where they are undisturbed by humans they become more active during the day.
They live in groups numbering between a single pair and up to 30 individuals, inside burrow systems known as ‘warrens’. Burrowing is carried out solely by females. Within a warren, two distinct hierarchies operate, one amongst bucks, the other amongst does; an individual’s status is set during play-fighting as a young rabbit.