Porcupines are rodents best known for their coat of sharp spines, or quills, that defend them from predators. The porcupines include the fourth largest rodent, after the capybara, mara, and beaver. Most porcupines are about 60-90 cm (25-36 inches) long, with a 20-25 cm (8-10 inch) long tail. Weighing between 5-16 kg (12-35 pounds), they are rounded, large and slow. Porcupines come in various shades of brown, grey, and the unusual white. The name "porcupine" comes from combining the Latin for pig and French for spine, hence the nickname "quill pig" for the animal.
In parts of Africa, porcupines are eaten as a form of bush meat. In Italy, porcupine's meat is also appreciated in some regions.
When threatened, a porcupine will raise its quills. This is the piloerection reflex, the same as the goose bump reflex in humans.
A porcupine can defend itself by hiding its bare face from an attacker and keeping its bare belly to the ground. It may swat its tail at an assailant. The quills are not poisoned, but animals may die from a porcupine encounter if the quills prevent eating. Porcupines often fall on their own quills. Likely as an evolutionary result, the quills possess mild antibiotic properties.
Quills are sharp-pointed, fitted with microscopic barbs, and expand on contact with warm flesh. Muscle contractions in a quill victim work the quill deeper, as much as 2 cm per day unless the quills are removed promptly.
There is a common joke: "Q:How do porcupines mate? A:Very carefully." In reality, however, the male porcupine uses urine to soften the females' quills before mating.
Fishers are known to successfully attack porcupines by biting their faces.
Porcupines in search of salt sometimes encroach on areas inhabited by people and eat tool handles, clothes and many other items that have been coated in salty sweat.
Porcupines vary in size considerably: Rothschild's Porcupine of South America weighs less than a kilogram; the African Porcupine can grow to well over 20 kg.
The two families of porcupines are quite different and although both belong to the Hystricognathi branch of the vast order Rodentia, they are not closely related.
The 11 Old World porcupines are almost exclusively terrestrial, tend to be fairly large, and have quills that are grouped in clusters. They separated from the other hystricognaths about 30 million years ago, much earlier than the New World porcupines.
The 12 New World porcupines are mostly smaller (although the North American Porcupine reaches about 85 cm in length and 18 kilograms), have their quills attached singly rather than grouped in clusters and are excellent climbers, spending much of their time in trees. The New World porcupines developed their spines independently and are more closely related to several other families of rodent than they are to the Old World porcupines.
ORDER RODENTIA
RodentsHystricognath rodentsPorcupines
Stachelschwein | Histriko | Puerco espín | Piikkisika | Porc-épic | דורבן (מכרסם) | Porkespino | ヤマアラシ | Hulepinnsvin | Landak | Stekelvarkens | Porco espinho
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"Porcupine".
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