Residents in Colorado have been issued a warning after as a virus that causes tentacle-like tumours to grow on rabbits is spreading. A rapidly spreading virus is causing cottontail rabbits in the US ...
Black tentacle-like protrusions are growing on bunnies — and no, it’s not a sign of symbiosis like we see in Marvel’s “Venom.” In Fort Collins, Colo., bunnies have been seen with what witnesses ...
Rabbits in northern Colorado have been spotted with bizarre, somewhat grisly horns on their face. But wildlife officials say the bunnies are likely ultimately going to be okay. They’re also not a ...
Cases of cottontail rabbit papillomavirus are causing alarming changes in Colorado's rabbits Kimberlee Speakman is a digital writer at PEOPLE. She has been working at PEOPLE since 2022. She has also ...
Rabbits growing apparent tentacle-like growths out of their heads have been spotted in Colorado, NBC affiliate KUSA in Denver reported. Residents like Susan Mansfield in Fort Collins, Colorado, ...
DENVER (KDVR) – Some rabbits in Colorado are sporting unusual wart- and tentacle-like growths, but officials say it’s not something to worry about. It’s not entirely rare, either, according to ...
Unlike the video of rabbits jumping on a trampoline, these pictures aren’t AI. In fact, the recently viral photos of rabbits in Fort Collins, Colorado, sporting strange, almost tentacle-like horns are ...
Rabbits with horn-like growths, sometimes called "tentacle rabbits," have recently been spotted hopping around Colorado. Their appearance is because of a virus in the animal, officials say. Residents ...
DENVER (KDVR) — If you’ve seen rabbits north of Fort Collins with unusual wart- and tentacle-like growths on them, you’re not alone, but officials say it’s not something to worry about. Colorado Parks ...
Residents in Fort Collins have spotted wild rabbits with ‘scary’ horn-like and tentacle-shaped growths protruding from their heads and faces. Residents in Fort Collins and other parts of Colorado have ...
There is a real virus discovered in the U.S. nearly a century ago known as the Shope papilloma virus that infects wild rabbits and causes tentacle- or horn-like growths on their skin. What's False ...
The virus, spread by insects or direct contact, poses no threat to humans. While usually not harmful to wild rabbits, the virus can be more serious for domestic rabbits. Cottontail rabbits with ...