My girl Pipp is totally bonded to me, she plays with me, grooms me, tries to sleep with me (I outweigh her by 140 lbs or more, so not a great idea). She's very territorial and beats the crap out of the cats if they come in our room.
My boy Dillis friendly (and curious) as all get-out, he greets people at the door, paws at your leg, LOVES his pets, he thinks other rabbits are cute (he hasn't noticed that he's a rabbit, too, and may well be a little person in a bunny suit). He will nip you if you don't behave, or if you're in his way, or you're holding him... but he only stays mad for a couple of seconds and never breaks skin.
His pet bunny, Sherry, is a territorial terrorist who is obsessed with patrolling her area (the house) and going after any other bunny she considers to be trespassing (everybody but Dill). But she's warmed up to me, comes when she's called and loves to bepetted, too. She will still grunt, lungeand/or box at times, butdoesn't bite.
Radar(a mutt) is a very docile boy, he's a little shy and not too bright, but sweet. His gf Darry (mini-lop), has drawn blood, she doesn't like handsvery much. Or arms, legs, torsos or heads for that matter. But shetolerates us. She doesn't hide, just ducks.
My two foster girls are very docile.They don't want to come out of their pen,they won't fight with other bunnies throughthe bars, and don't seem territorial at all. Although when I separated them from their ailing brother -- who was the friendliest of the trio to humans, but also the most aggressive (barely) to other bunnies -- they wouldn't let him move back in.
Conclusions? Beats me.:dunno
I guess the boys are friendlierand the girls more territorial, but if you bond with a girl, and you're her territory, you are so in.
Dill and I were bonded, too, until the interloper showed up (Sherry :X), but I think Dill willbond with anybody (or anything), so hard to say what effect his maleness had.
THis probably doesn't help.
Back to work!!
sas :whistling