<Li> Haystack: A Himalayan doe who is Boxwood's mate . </Li> <Li> Laurel: A "short - haired black Angora" buck . He is freed by the Watership rabbits along with the other hutch rabbits, but is recaptured soon after . </Li> <P> Note: normally, Angora rabbits never are short haired . It seems that no one knows who mated with whom, but the book suggests that it was Clover and Holly, Bigwig and Thethuthinnang, Hazel and Hyzenthlay and Fiver and Vilthuril . </P> <Ul> <Li> Cowslip: Although he is not a Chief Rabbit, his strange warren is usually referred to as "Cowslip's Warren" because he is the first resident therein that Hazel's rabbits meet . Cowslip is laconic and almost too refined, with great size and a strange scent, perhaps from a life of superior food, and he seems typical of his fellows . As Fiver soon discovers, a farmer leaves vegetables out so that he can trap rabbits coming and going, but this is a severely taboo subject in the warren, and Cowslip and his fellows refuse to talk about it, and instead pretend that all is well . Cowslip later refuses to help or even acknowledge Bigwig, when he is trapped and nearly killed by the farmer's snare . When Holly, Bluebell, and Pimpernel later happen into the area, Cowslip leads an attack upon these last surviving Sandleforders . However, while the locals have remarkable cultural sophistication (even art), they are woefully unskilled at fighting, and succeed in killing only the sickened Pimpernel . His warren--a harvesting ground of rabbit meat for a human--goes down in lapine history as being "bewitched". In the TV series, Cowslip becomes angered by Hazel's warren when they help a group of his rabbits escape from his warren, and even helps Woundwort to get his revenge on them, however, as he himself states, "I'm a plotter, not a fighter" and he uses both sides for his own gain . Later he trades his seer, Silverweed, to Woundwort in exchange for the destruction of his escaped rabbit's warren . </Li> <Li> Nildro - hain: Strawberry's mate in Cowslip's warren; she is killed by a snare, following which incident Strawberry escapes to join Hazel's band . Her name is Lapine for "blackbird's song"--birdsong being one of the many un-rabbitlike qualities that her warren adopts due to its unnatural lifestyle . </Li> <Li> Silverweed: The local equivalent of a storyteller, Silverweed recites disturbing poetry which makes Fiver fearful and wary . Because he talks in poetry and riddles, he is the only outlet through which the other rabbits in his warren can confront their morbid situation . In the television series, he is given a new backstory, in that he is a seer with mental abilities similar to Fiver, in particular possessing the ability to see into another rabbit's heart by touch . He is traded to Woundwort to help him seek his destiny, but later ends up on Watership Down and becomes a good friend of the rabbits there, even sacrificing most of his youth to help save the warren from Woundwort . </Li> <Li> Laburnum: An artist, he made the shape on the wall of El - ahrairah . He does not appear in the book or TV series, but he is mentioned by Strawberry when he shows the shape to Hazel . Although his taking the time to make a shape of El - ahrairah and even his name (which in Lapine means "Poison - tree") are considered extremely un-rabbit - like, his art is seen as old - fashioned, since the warren in which he lives has long since abandoned values such as cunning and survival . </Li> <Li> Kingcup: Another rabbit who was killed by a snare . When the eleven rabbits who left Sandleford arrive, Strawberry looks for him but does not find him in his burrow . Realizing what happened to him, Strawberry removes all traces that any rabbit ever lived in that burrow . </Li> <Li> Betony: A rabbit whose doe sings like a robin . </Li> <Li> Strawberry: A former member of this warren (See above listing for this character under Watership Down Rabbits). </Li> </Ul>

What are the rabbits names in watership down