Pet Rabbit Teeth
Ideally, the top front teeth of a rabbit will lap over the front
bottom teeth. Since rabbit teeth grow, this positioning allows
natural wearing to occur as the rabbit eats his food and hay.
Occasionally, the front teeth will butt. If the teeth are
wearing normally (you don't see any really long teeth), I would
judge those teeth acceptable for a pet rabbit. Butting teeth is
a showing disqualification, so if you are willing to accept a
rabbit with non-problematic butting teeth, you may be able to
adopt a gorgeous [otherwise] show-quality rabbit.
Sometimes the teeth will butt or overlap the wrong way and not
wear normally. In this case, the teeth can be clipped. It only
takes a few seconds and is easy to learn how to do; your vet or
a breeder can teach you. My vet charges less to clip a rabbit's
teeth than to clip a dog's nails. The frequency of the clipping
would vary with the severity of the malocclusion. If the teeth
need clipping but are not clipped, the rabbit could lose his
ability to eat and literally starve to death.
Wolf teeth are misaligned teeth that grow in all types of
directions. Simple clipping may not be enough to all rabbits
with this sort of teeth problem to live a normal life. In many
cases, rabbits with severe teeth problems may require euthanasia.
Checking the teeth is only one part of the pre-purchase
evaluation you should perform before you decide to purchase a
pet rabbit. Visit Precious Pet Rabbits
(http://www.pet-rabbit-care-information.com/) for more
information on buying pet rabbits.