Porcupines are prickly and often misunderstood creatures--get the
facts.
Could a porcupine make a good pet? Do they ever stick themselves or
other porcupines with their quills? In this latest addition to the
Animal Answer Guide series, we learn about these mysterious animals'
"pincushion defense," along with the following facts:
- Porcupines survive on a diet of leaves, bark, and fruit
- Quills are actually modified hairs
- There are 26 species of porcupines (and counting)
- Old World and New World porcupines have a common ancestor but evolved
independently
- New World males will gather to fight ferociously over a single female
Porcupines: The Animal Answer Guide presents solid, current science in
the field of porcupine biology. Uldis Roze compares and contrasts
porcupines in terms of body plan, behavior, ecology, reproduction, and
evolutionary relationships. He examines the diversity of porcupines from
around the world--from North and South America to Africa and Asia.
This guide explores the interactions between humans and porcupines,
including hunting, use of quills by aboriginal societies, efforts to
poison porcupines, and human and pet injuries (and deaths) caused by
porcupines. Roze also highlights the conservation issues that surround
some porcupine species, such as the thin-spine porcupine of Brazil,
which is so rare that it was thought to be extinct until its rediscovery
in the 1980s.